blob: cea055758d2f24e9819c635a0d4b66e3599a731b [file] [log] [blame]
Benjamin Petersonf10a79a2008-10-11 00:49:57 +00001****************************
2 What's New in Python 2.7
3****************************
4
5:Author: A.M. Kuchling (amk at amk.ca)
6:Release: |release|
7:Date: |today|
8
Benjamin Peterson08bf91c2010-04-11 16:12:57 +00009.. hyperlink all the methods & functions.
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +000010
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +000011.. T_STRING_INPLACE not described in main docs
12.. "Format String Syntax" in string.rst could use many more examples.
13
Benjamin Petersonf10a79a2008-10-11 00:49:57 +000014.. $Id$
15 Rules for maintenance:
16
17 * Anyone can add text to this document. Do not spend very much time
18 on the wording of your changes, because your text will probably
19 get rewritten to some degree.
20
21 * The maintainer will go through Misc/NEWS periodically and add
22 changes; it's therefore more important to add your changes to
23 Misc/NEWS than to this file.
24
25 * This is not a complete list of every single change; completeness
26 is the purpose of Misc/NEWS. Some changes I consider too small
27 or esoteric to include. If such a change is added to the text,
28 I'll just remove it. (This is another reason you shouldn't spend
29 too much time on writing your addition.)
30
31 * If you want to draw your new text to the attention of the
32 maintainer, add 'XXX' to the beginning of the paragraph or
33 section.
34
35 * It's OK to just add a fragmentary note about a change. For
36 example: "XXX Describe the transmogrify() function added to the
37 socket module." The maintainer will research the change and
38 write the necessary text.
39
40 * You can comment out your additions if you like, but it's not
41 necessary (especially when a final release is some months away).
42
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +000043 * Credit the author of a patch or bugfix. Just the name is
Benjamin Petersonf10a79a2008-10-11 00:49:57 +000044 sufficient; the e-mail address isn't necessary.
45
46 * It's helpful to add the bug/patch number in a parenthetical comment.
47
48 XXX Describe the transmogrify() function added to the socket
49 module.
50 (Contributed by P.Y. Developer; :issue:`12345`.)
51
52 This saves the maintainer some effort going through the SVN logs
53 when researching a change.
54
Benjamin Peterson9eea4802009-12-31 03:31:15 +000055This article explains the new features in Python 2.7. The final
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +000056release of 2.7 is currently scheduled for July 2010; the detailed
Benjamin Peterson9eea4802009-12-31 03:31:15 +000057schedule is described in :pep:`373`.
Benjamin Petersonf10a79a2008-10-11 00:49:57 +000058
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +000059Numeric handling has been improved in many ways, for both
60floating-point numbers and for the :class:`Decimal` class. There are
61some useful additions to the standard library, such as a greatly
62enhanced :mod:`unittest` module, the :mod:`argparse` module for
63parsing command-line options, convenient ordered-dictionary and
64:class:`Counter` classes in the :mod:`collections` module, and many
65other improvements.
Benjamin Petersond69fe2a2010-02-03 02:59:43 +000066
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +000067Python 2.7 is planned to be the last of the 2.x releases, so we worked
68on making it a good release for the long term. To help with porting
69to Python 3, several new features from the Python 3.x series have been
70included in 2.7.
71
72This article doesn't attempt to provide a complete specification of
73the new features, but instead provides a convenient overview. For
74full details, you should refer to the documentation for Python 2.7 at
75http://docs.python.org. If you want to understand the rationale for
76the design and implementation, refer to the PEP for a particular new
77feature or the issue on http://bugs.python.org in which a change was
78discussed. Whenever possible, "What's New in Python" links to the
79bug/patch item for each change.
Benjamin Petersonf10a79a2008-10-11 00:49:57 +000080
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +000081.. _whatsnew27-python31:
82
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +000083The Future for Python 2.x
84=========================
85
86Python 2.7 is intended to be the last major release in the 2.x series.
87The Python maintainers are planning to focus their future efforts on
88the Python 3.x series.
89
90This means that 2.7 will remain in place for a long time, running
91production systems that have not been ported to Python 3.x.
92Two consequences of the long-term significance of 2.7 are:
93
94* It's very likely the 2.7 release will have a longer period of
95 maintenance compared to earlier 2.x versions. Python 2.7 will
96 continue to be maintained while the transition to 3.x continues, and
97 the developers are planning to support Python 2.7 with bug-fix
98 releases beyond the typical two years.
99
100* A policy decision was made to silence warnings only of interest to
101 developers. :exc:`DeprecationWarning` and its
102 descendants are now ignored unless otherwise requested, preventing
103 users from seeing warnings triggered by an application. This change
104 was also made in the branch that will become Python 3.2. (Discussed
105 on stdlib-sig and carried out in :issue:`7319`.)
106
107 In previous releases, :exc:`DeprecationWarning` messages were
108 enabled by default, providing Python developers with a clear
109 indication of where their code may break in a future major version
110 of Python.
111
112 However, there are increasingly many users of Python-based
113 applications who are not directly involved in the development of
114 those applications. :exc:`DeprecationWarning` messages are
115 irrelevant to such users, making them worry about an application
116 that's actually working correctly and burdening application developers
117 with responding to these concerns.
118
119 You can re-enable display of :exc:`DeprecationWarning` messages by
120 running Python with the :option:`-Wdefault` (short form:
121 :option:`-Wd`) switch, or by setting the :envvar:`PYTHONWARNINGS`
122 environment variable to ``"default"`` (or ``"d"``) before running
123 Python. Python code can also re-enable them
124 by calling ``warnings.simplefilter('default')``.
125
126
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +0000127Python 3.1 Features
128=======================
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +0000129
130Much as Python 2.6 incorporated features from Python 3.0,
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +0000131version 2.7 incorporates some of the new features
132in Python 3.1. The 2.x series continues to provide tools
133for migrating to the 3.x series.
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +0000134
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +0000135A partial list of 3.1 features that were backported to 2.7:
136
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000137* The syntax for set literals (``{1,2,3}`` is a mutable set).
138* Dictionary and set comprehensions (``{ i: i*2 for i in range(3)}``).
139* Multiple context managers in a single :keyword:`with` statement.
140* A new version of the :mod:`io` library, rewritten in C for performance.
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +0000141* The ordered-dictionary type described in :ref:`pep-0372`.
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000142* The new ``","`` format specifier described in :ref:`pep-0378`.
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +0000143* The :class:`memoryview` object.
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000144* A small subset of the :mod:`importlib` module,
145 `described below <#importlib-section>`__.
Benjamin Peterson9eea4802009-12-31 03:31:15 +0000146* Float-to-string and string-to-float conversions now round their
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000147 results more correctly, and :func:`repr` of a floating-point
Benjamin Peterson9eea4802009-12-31 03:31:15 +0000148 number *x* returns a result that's guaranteed to round back to the
149 same number when converted back to a string.
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000150* The :ctype:`PyCapsule` type, used to provide a C API for extension modules.
Benjamin Peterson9eea4802009-12-31 03:31:15 +0000151* The :cfunc:`PyLong_AsLongAndOverflow` C API function.
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +0000152
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +0000153Other new Python3-mode warnings include:
154
155* :func:`operator.isCallable` and :func:`operator.sequenceIncludes`,
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000156 which are not supported in 3.x, now trigger warnings.
157* The :option:`-3` switch now automatically
158 enables the :option:`-Qwarn` switch that causes warnings
159 about using classic division with integers and long integers.
160
161
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +0000162
Benjamin Petersonf10a79a2008-10-11 00:49:57 +0000163.. ========================================================================
164.. Large, PEP-level features and changes should be described here.
Benjamin Petersonf10a79a2008-10-11 00:49:57 +0000165.. ========================================================================
166
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +0000167.. _pep-0372:
168
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000169PEP 372: Adding an Ordered Dictionary to collections
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +0000170====================================================
171
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +0000172Regular Python dictionaries iterate over key/value pairs in arbitrary order.
173Over the years, a number of authors have written alternative implementations
174that remember the order that the keys were originally inserted. Based on
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000175the experiences from those implementations, 2.7 introduces a new
176:class:`~collections.OrderedDict` class in the :mod:`collections` module.
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +0000177
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000178The :class:`~collections.OrderedDict` API provides the same interface as regular
179dictionaries but iterates over keys and values in a guaranteed order
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +0000180depending on when a key was first inserted::
Benjamin Petersonf10a79a2008-10-11 00:49:57 +0000181
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +0000182 >>> from collections import OrderedDict
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000183 >>> d = OrderedDict([('first', 1),
184 ... ('second', 2),
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +0000185 ... ('third', 3)])
186 >>> d.items()
187 [('first', 1), ('second', 2), ('third', 3)]
188
189If a new entry overwrites an existing entry, the original insertion
190position is left unchanged::
191
192 >>> d['second'] = 4
193 >>> d.items()
194 [('first', 1), ('second', 4), ('third', 3)]
195
196Deleting an entry and reinserting it will move it to the end::
197
198 >>> del d['second']
199 >>> d['second'] = 5
200 >>> d.items()
201 [('first', 1), ('third', 3), ('second', 5)]
202
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +0000203The :meth:`~collections.OrderedDict.popitem` method has an optional *last*
204argument that defaults to True. If *last* is True, the most recently
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +0000205added key is returned and removed; if it's False, the
206oldest key is selected::
207
208 >>> od = OrderedDict([(x,0) for x in range(20)])
209 >>> od.popitem()
210 (19, 0)
211 >>> od.popitem()
212 (18, 0)
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +0000213 >>> od.popitem(last=False)
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +0000214 (0, 0)
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +0000215 >>> od.popitem(last=False)
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +0000216 (1, 0)
217
218Comparing two ordered dictionaries checks both the keys and values,
219and requires that the insertion order was the same::
220
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000221 >>> od1 = OrderedDict([('first', 1),
222 ... ('second', 2),
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +0000223 ... ('third', 3)])
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000224 >>> od2 = OrderedDict([('third', 3),
225 ... ('first', 1),
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +0000226 ... ('second', 2)])
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +0000227 >>> od1 == od2
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +0000228 False
229 >>> # Move 'third' key to the end
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +0000230 >>> del od2['third']; od2['third'] = 3
231 >>> od1 == od2
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +0000232 True
233
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +0000234Comparing an :class:`~collections.OrderedDict` with a regular dictionary
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +0000235ignores the insertion order and just compares the keys and values.
236
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +0000237How does the :class:`~collections.OrderedDict` work? It maintains a
238doubly-linked list of keys, appending new keys to the list as they're inserted.
239A secondary dictionary maps keys to their corresponding list node, so
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +0000240deletion doesn't have to traverse the entire linked list and therefore
241remains O(1).
242
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +0000243The standard library now supports use of ordered dictionaries in several
Ezio Melotti11d22dc2010-04-20 09:55:05 +0000244modules.
245
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000246* The :mod:`ConfigParser` module uses them by default, meaning that
247 configuration files can now read, modified, and then written back
248 in their original order.
Ezio Melotti11d22dc2010-04-20 09:55:05 +0000249
250* The :meth:`~collections.somenamedtuple._asdict()` method for
251 :func:`collections.namedtuple` now returns an ordered dictionary with the
252 values appearing in the same order as the underlying tuple indices.
253
254* The :mod:`json` module's :class:`~json.JSONDecoder` class
255 constructor was extended with an *object_pairs_hook* parameter to
256 allow :class:`OrderedDict` instances to be built by the decoder.
257 Support was also added for third-party tools like
258 `PyYAML <http://pyyaml.org/>`_.
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +0000259
260.. seealso::
261
262 :pep:`372` - Adding an ordered dictionary to collections
263 PEP written by Armin Ronacher and Raymond Hettinger;
264 implemented by Raymond Hettinger.
265
266.. _pep-0378:
267
268PEP 378: Format Specifier for Thousands Separator
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +0000269=================================================
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +0000270
271To make program output more readable, it can be useful to add
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000272separators to large numbers, rendering them as
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +000027318,446,744,073,709,551,616 instead of 18446744073709551616.
274
275The fully general solution for doing this is the :mod:`locale` module,
276which can use different separators ("," in North America, "." in
277Europe) and different grouping sizes, but :mod:`locale` is complicated
278to use and unsuitable for multi-threaded applications where different
279threads are producing output for different locales.
280
281Therefore, a simple comma-grouping mechanism has been added to the
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +0000282mini-language used by the :meth:`str.format` method. When
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +0000283formatting a floating-point number, simply include a comma between the
284width and the precision::
285
Eric Smith2b1a1162010-04-06 14:57:57 +0000286 >>> '{:20,.2f}'.format(18446744073709551616.0)
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +0000287 '18,446,744,073,709,551,616.00'
288
Eric Smith21e85c72010-04-06 15:21:59 +0000289When formatting an integer, include the comma after the width:
290
291 >>> '{:20,d}'.format(18446744073709551616)
292 '18,446,744,073,709,551,616'
293
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +0000294This mechanism is not adaptable at all; commas are always used as the
295separator and the grouping is always into three-digit groups. The
296comma-formatting mechanism isn't as general as the :mod:`locale`
297module, but it's easier to use.
298
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +0000299.. seealso::
300
301 :pep:`378` - Format Specifier for Thousands Separator
302 PEP written by Raymond Hettinger; implemented by Eric Smith.
Benjamin Petersonf10a79a2008-10-11 00:49:57 +0000303
Benjamin Peterson9895f912010-03-21 22:05:32 +0000304PEP 389: The argparse Module for Parsing Command Lines
305======================================================
306
Benjamin Peterson08bf91c2010-04-11 16:12:57 +0000307The :mod:`argparse` module for parsing command-line arguments was
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000308added as a more powerful replacement for the
Benjamin Peterson08bf91c2010-04-11 16:12:57 +0000309:mod:`optparse` module.
310
311This means Python now supports three different modules for parsing
312command-line arguments: :mod:`getopt`, :mod:`optparse`, and
313:mod:`argparse`. The :mod:`getopt` module closely resembles the C
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000314library's :cfunc:`getopt` function, so it remains useful if you're writing a
Benjamin Peterson08bf91c2010-04-11 16:12:57 +0000315Python prototype that will eventually be rewritten in C.
316:mod:`optparse` becomes redundant, but there are no plans to remove it
317because there are many scripts still using it, and there's no
318automated way to update these scripts. (Making the :mod:`argparse`
319API consistent with :mod:`optparse`'s interface was discussed but
320rejected as too messy and difficult.)
321
Ezio Melotti11d22dc2010-04-20 09:55:05 +0000322In short, if you're writing a new script and don't need to worry
Benjamin Peterson08bf91c2010-04-11 16:12:57 +0000323about compatibility with earlier versions of Python, use
324:mod:`argparse` instead of :mod:`optparse`.
325
Ezio Melotti11d22dc2010-04-20 09:55:05 +0000326Here's an example::
327
328 import argparse
329
330 parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description='Command-line example.')
331
332 # Add optional switches
333 parser.add_argument('-v', action='store_true', dest='is_verbose',
334 help='produce verbose output')
335 parser.add_argument('-o', action='store', dest='output',
336 metavar='FILE',
337 help='direct output to FILE instead of stdout')
338 parser.add_argument('-C', action='store', type=int, dest='context',
339 metavar='NUM', default=0,
340 help='display NUM lines of added context')
341
342 # Allow any number of additional arguments.
343 parser.add_argument(nargs='*', action='store', dest='inputs',
344 help='input filenames (default is stdin)')
345
346 args = parser.parse_args()
347 print args.__dict__
348
349Unless you override it, :option:`-h` and :option:`--help` switches
350are automatically added, and produce neatly formatted output::
351
352 -> ./python.exe argparse-example.py --help
353 usage: argparse-example.py [-h] [-v] [-o FILE] [-C NUM] [inputs [inputs ...]]
354
355 Command-line example.
356
357 positional arguments:
358 inputs input filenames (default is stdin)
359
360 optional arguments:
361 -h, --help show this help message and exit
362 -v produce verbose output
363 -o FILE direct output to FILE instead of stdout
364 -C NUM display NUM lines of added context
365
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000366As with :mod:`optparse`, the command-line switches and arguments
Ezio Melotti11d22dc2010-04-20 09:55:05 +0000367are returned as an object with attributes named by the *dest* parameters::
368
369 -> ./python.exe argparse-example.py -v
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000370 {'output': None,
371 'is_verbose': True,
372 'context': 0,
373 'inputs': []}
Ezio Melotti11d22dc2010-04-20 09:55:05 +0000374
375 -> ./python.exe argparse-example.py -v -o /tmp/output -C 4 file1 file2
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000376 {'output': '/tmp/output',
377 'is_verbose': True,
378 'context': 4,
Ezio Melotti11d22dc2010-04-20 09:55:05 +0000379 'inputs': ['file1', 'file2']}
380
381:mod:`argparse` has much fancier validation than :mod:`optparse`; you
382can specify an exact number of arguments as an integer, 0 or more
383arguments by passing ``'*'``, 1 or more by passing ``'+'``, or an
384optional argument with ``'?'``. A top-level parser can contain
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000385sub-parsers to define subcommands that have different sets of
Ezio Melotti11d22dc2010-04-20 09:55:05 +0000386switches, as in ``svn commit``, ``svn checkout``, etc. You can
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000387specify an argument's type as :class:`~argparse.FileType`, which will
Ezio Melotti11d22dc2010-04-20 09:55:05 +0000388automatically open files for you and understands that ``'-'`` means
389standard input or output.
Benjamin Peterson9895f912010-03-21 22:05:32 +0000390
391.. seealso::
392
Benjamin Peterson08bf91c2010-04-11 16:12:57 +0000393 `argparse module documentation <http://docs.python.org/dev/library/argparse.html>`__
394
395 `Upgrading optparse code to use argparse <http://docs.python.org/dev/library/argparse.html#upgrading-optparse-code>`__
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000396 Part of the Python documentation, describing how to convert
397 code that uses :mod:`optparse`.
Benjamin Peterson08bf91c2010-04-11 16:12:57 +0000398
Benjamin Peterson9895f912010-03-21 22:05:32 +0000399 :pep:`389` - argparse - New Command Line Parsing Module
400 PEP written and implemented by Steven Bethard.
401
402PEP 391: Dictionary-Based Configuration For Logging
403====================================================
404
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000405.. XXX not documented in library reference yet; add link here once it's added.
Ezio Melotti11d22dc2010-04-20 09:55:05 +0000406
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000407The :mod:`logging` module is very flexible; applications can define
Ezio Melotti11d22dc2010-04-20 09:55:05 +0000408a tree of logging subsystems, and each logger in this tree can filter
409out certain messages, format them differently, and direct messages to
410a varying number of handlers.
411
412All this flexibility can require a lot of configuration. You can
413write Python statements to create objects and set their properties,
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000414but a complex set-up requires verbose but boring code.
Ezio Melotti11d22dc2010-04-20 09:55:05 +0000415:mod:`logging` also supports a :func:`~logging.config.fileConfig`
416function that parses a file, but the file format doesn't support
417configuring filters, and it's messier to generate programmatically.
418
419Python 2.7 adds a :func:`~logging.config.dictConfig` function that
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000420uses a dictionary to configure logging. There are many ways to
421produce a dictionary from different sources: construct one with code;
422parse a file containing JSON; or use a YAML parsing library if one is
423installed.
Ezio Melotti11d22dc2010-04-20 09:55:05 +0000424
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000425The following example configures two loggers, the root logger and a
426logger named "network". Messages sent to the root logger will be
427sent to the system log using the syslog protocol, and messages
428to the "network" logger will be written to a :file:`network.log` file
429that will be rotated once the log reaches 1Mb.
Benjamin Peterson9895f912010-03-21 22:05:32 +0000430
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000431::
432
433 import logging
434 import logging.config
435
436 configdict = {
437 'version': 1, # Configuration schema in use; must be 1 for now
438 'formatters': {
439 'standard': {
440 'format': ('%(asctime)s %(name)-15s '
441 '%(levelname)-8s %(message)s')}},
442
443 'handlers': {'netlog': {'backupCount': 10,
444 'class': 'logging.handlers.RotatingFileHandler',
445 'filename': '/logs/network.log',
446 'formatter': 'standard',
447 'level': 'INFO',
448 'maxBytes': 1024*1024},
449 'syslog': {'class': 'logging.handlers.SysLogHandler',
450 'formatter': 'standard',
451 'level': 'ERROR'}},
452
453 # Specify all the subordinate loggers
454 'loggers': {
455 'network': {
456 'handlers': ['netlog']
457 }
458 },
459 # Specify properties of the root logger
460 'root': {
461 'handlers': ['syslog']
462 },
463 }
464
465 # Set up configuration
466 logging.config.dictConfig(configdict)
467
468 # As an example, log two error messages
469 logger = logging.getLogger('/')
470 logger.error('Database not found')
471
472 netlogger = logging.getLogger('network')
473 netlogger.error('Connection failed')
474
475Three smaller enhancements to the :mod:`logging` module, all
476implemented by Vinay Sajip, are:
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +0000477
478.. rev79293
479
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000480* The :class:`~logging.handlers.SysLogHandler` class now supports
481 syslogging over TCP. The constructor has a *socktype* parameter
482 giving the type of socket to use, either :const:`socket.SOCK_DGRAM`
483 for UDP or :const:`socket.SOCK_STREAM` for TCP. The default
484 protocol remains UDP.
485
486* :class:`Logger` instances gained a :meth:`getChild` method that retrieves a
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +0000487 descendant logger using a relative path. For example,
488 once you retrieve a logger by doing ``log = getLogger('app')``,
489 calling ``log.getChild('network.listen')`` is equivalent to
490 ``getLogger('app.network.listen')``.
491
492* The :class:`LoggerAdapter` class gained a :meth:`isEnabledFor` method
493 that takes a *level* and returns whether the underlying logger would
494 process a message of that level of importance.
495
Benjamin Peterson9895f912010-03-21 22:05:32 +0000496.. seealso::
497
498 :pep:`391` - Dictionary-Based Configuration For Logging
499 PEP written and implemented by Vinay Sajip.
500
501PEP 3106: Dictionary Views
502====================================================
503
Ezio Melotti11d22dc2010-04-20 09:55:05 +0000504The dictionary methods :meth:`keys`, :meth:`values`, and :meth:`items`
505are different in Python 3.x. They return an object called a :dfn:`view`
506instead of a fully materialized list.
507
Ezio Melotti11d22dc2010-04-20 09:55:05 +0000508It's not possible to change the return values of :meth:`keys`,
509:meth:`values`, and :meth:`items` in Python 2.7 because too much code
510would break. Instead the 3.x versions were added under the new names
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000511:meth:`viewkeys`, :meth:`viewvalues`, and :meth:`viewitems`.
Ezio Melotti11d22dc2010-04-20 09:55:05 +0000512
513::
514
515 >>> d = dict((i*10, chr(65+i)) for i in range(26))
516 >>> d
517 {0: 'A', 130: 'N', 10: 'B', 140: 'O', 20: ..., 250: 'Z'}
518 >>> d.viewkeys()
519 dict_keys([0, 130, 10, 140, 20, 150, 30, ..., 250])
520
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000521Views can be iterated over, but the key and item views also behave
522like sets. The ``&`` operator performs intersection, and ``|``
523performs a union::
524
525 >>> d1 = dict((i*10, chr(65+i)) for i in range(26))
526 >>> d2 = dict((i**.5, i) for i in range(1000))
527 >>> d1.viewkeys() & d2.viewkeys()
528 set([0.0, 10.0, 20.0, 30.0])
529 >>> d1.viewkeys() | range(0, 30)
530 set([0, 1, 130, 3, 4, 5, 6, ..., 120, 250])
531
Ezio Melotti11d22dc2010-04-20 09:55:05 +0000532The view keeps track of the dictionary and its contents change as the
533dictionary is modified::
534
535 >>> vk = d.viewkeys()
536 >>> vk
537 dict_keys([0, 130, 10, ..., 250])
538 >>> d[260] = '&'
539 >>> vk
540 dict_keys([0, 130, 260, 10, ..., 250])
541
542However, note that you can't add or remove keys while you're iterating
543over the view::
544
545 >>> for k in vk:
546 ... d[k*2] = k
547 ...
548 Traceback (most recent call last):
549 File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
550 RuntimeError: dictionary changed size during iteration
551
552You can use the view methods in Python 2.x code, and the 2to3
553converter will change them to the standard :meth:`keys`,
554:meth:`values`, and :meth:`items` methods.
Benjamin Peterson9895f912010-03-21 22:05:32 +0000555
556.. seealso::
557
558 :pep:`3106` - Revamping dict.keys(), .values() and .items()
559 PEP written by Guido van Rossum.
560 Backported to 2.7 by Alexandre Vassalotti; :issue:`1967`.
561
562
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000563PEP 3137: The memoryview Object
564====================================================
565
566The :class:`memoryview` object provides a view of another object's
567memory content that matches the :class:`bytes` type's interface.
568
569 >>> import string
570 >>> m = memoryview(string.letters)
571 >>> m
572 <memory at 0x37f850>
573 >>> len(m) # Returns length of underlying object
574 52
575 >>> m[0], m[25], m[26] # Indexing returns one byte
576 ('a', 'z', 'A')
577 >>> m2 = m[0:26] # Slicing returns another memoryview
578 >>> m2
579 <memory at 0x37f080>
580
581The content of the view can be converted to a string of bytes or
582a list of integers:
583
584 >>> m2.tobytes()
585 'abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz'
586 >>> m2.tolist()
587 [97, 98, 99, 100, 101, 102, 103, ... 121, 122]
588 >>>
589
590:class:`memoryview` objects allow modifying the underlying object if
591it's a mutable object.
592
593 >>> m2[0] = 75
594 Traceback (most recent call last):
595 File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
596 TypeError: cannot modify read-only memory
597 >>> b = bytearray(string.letters) # Creating a mutable object
598 >>> b
599 bytearray(b'abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ')
600 >>> mb = memoryview(b)
601 >>> mb[0] = '*' # Assign to view, changing the bytearray.
602 >>> b[0:5] # The bytearray has been changed.
603 bytearray(b'*bcde')
604 >>>
605
606.. seealso::
607
608 :pep:`3137` - Immutable Bytes and Mutable Buffer
609 PEP written by Guido van Rossum.
610 Implemented by Travis Oliphant, Antoine Pitrou and others.
611 Backported to 2.7 by Antoine Pitrou; :issue:`2396`.
612
613
614
Benjamin Petersonf10a79a2008-10-11 00:49:57 +0000615Other Language Changes
616======================
617
618Some smaller changes made to the core Python language are:
619
Benjamin Peterson9895f912010-03-21 22:05:32 +0000620* The syntax for set literals has been backported from Python 3.x.
621 Curly brackets are used to surround the contents of the resulting
622 mutable set; set literals are
623 distinguished from dictionaries by not containing colons and values.
624 ``{}`` continues to represent an empty dictionary; use
625 ``set()`` for an empty set.
626
627 >>> {1,2,3,4,5}
628 set([1, 2, 3, 4, 5])
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +0000629 >>> set() # empty set
Benjamin Peterson9895f912010-03-21 22:05:32 +0000630 set([])
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +0000631 >>> {} # empty dict
Benjamin Peterson9895f912010-03-21 22:05:32 +0000632 {}
633
634 Backported by Alexandre Vassalotti; :issue:`2335`.
635
636* Dictionary and set comprehensions are another feature backported from
637 3.x, generalizing list/generator comprehensions to use
638 the literal syntax for sets and dictionaries.
639
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000640 >>> {x: x*x for x in range(6)}
Benjamin Peterson9895f912010-03-21 22:05:32 +0000641 {0: 0, 1: 1, 2: 4, 3: 9, 4: 16, 5: 25}
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000642 >>> {('a'*x) for x in range(6)}
Benjamin Peterson9895f912010-03-21 22:05:32 +0000643 set(['', 'a', 'aa', 'aaa', 'aaaa', 'aaaaa'])
644
645 Backported by Alexandre Vassalotti; :issue:`2333`.
646
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +0000647* The :keyword:`with` statement can now use multiple context managers
648 in one statement. Context managers are processed from left to right
649 and each one is treated as beginning a new :keyword:`with` statement.
650 This means that::
651
652 with A() as a, B() as b:
653 ... suite of statements ...
654
655 is equivalent to::
656
657 with A() as a:
658 with B() as b:
659 ... suite of statements ...
660
661 The :func:`contextlib.nested` function provides a very similar
662 function, so it's no longer necessary and has been deprecated.
663
664 (Proposed in http://codereview.appspot.com/53094; implemented by
665 Georg Brandl.)
666
Benjamin Peterson9eea4802009-12-31 03:31:15 +0000667* Conversions between floating-point numbers and strings are
668 now correctly rounded on most platforms. These conversions occur
669 in many different places: :func:`str` on
670 floats and complex numbers; the :class:`float` and :class:`complex`
671 constructors;
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000672 numeric formatting; serializing and
673 deserializing floats and complex numbers using the
Benjamin Peterson9eea4802009-12-31 03:31:15 +0000674 :mod:`marshal`, :mod:`pickle`
675 and :mod:`json` modules;
676 parsing of float and imaginary literals in Python code;
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +0000677 and :class:`~decimal.Decimal`-to-float conversion.
Benjamin Peterson9eea4802009-12-31 03:31:15 +0000678
679 Related to this, the :func:`repr` of a floating-point number *x*
680 now returns a result based on the shortest decimal string that's
681 guaranteed to round back to *x* under correct rounding (with
682 round-half-to-even rounding mode). Previously it gave a string
683 based on rounding x to 17 decimal digits.
684
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +0000685 .. maybe add an example?
686
Benjamin Peterson9eea4802009-12-31 03:31:15 +0000687 The rounding library responsible for this improvement works on
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000688 Windows and on Unix platforms using the gcc, icc, or suncc
Benjamin Peterson9eea4802009-12-31 03:31:15 +0000689 compilers. There may be a small number of platforms where correct
690 operation of this code cannot be guaranteed, so the code is not
Benjamin Petersona28e7022010-01-09 18:53:06 +0000691 used on such systems. You can find out which code is being used
692 by checking :data:`sys.float_repr_style`, which will be ``short``
693 if the new code is in use and ``legacy`` if it isn't.
Benjamin Peterson9eea4802009-12-31 03:31:15 +0000694
Mark Dickinson0bc8f902010-01-07 09:31:48 +0000695 Implemented by Eric Smith and Mark Dickinson, using David Gay's
696 :file:`dtoa.c` library; :issue:`7117`.
Benjamin Peterson9eea4802009-12-31 03:31:15 +0000697
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +0000698* Conversions from long integers and regular integers to floating
699 point now round differently, returning the floating-point number
700 closest to the number. This doesn't matter for small integers that
701 can be converted exactly, but for large numbers that will
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +0000702 unavoidably lose precision, Python 2.7 now approximates more
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +0000703 closely. For example, Python 2.6 computed the following::
704
705 >>> n = 295147905179352891391
706 >>> float(n)
707 2.9514790517935283e+20
708 >>> n - long(float(n))
709 65535L
710
711 Python 2.7's floating-point result is larger, but much closer to the
712 true value::
713
714 >>> n = 295147905179352891391
715 >>> float(n)
716 2.9514790517935289e+20
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +0000717 >>> n - long(float(n))
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +0000718 -1L
719
720 (Implemented by Mark Dickinson; :issue:`3166`.)
721
Benjamin Peterson9eea4802009-12-31 03:31:15 +0000722 Integer division is also more accurate in its rounding behaviours. (Also
723 implemented by Mark Dickinson; :issue:`1811`.)
724
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000725* Implicit coercion for complex numbers has been removed; the interpreter
726 will no longer ever attempt to call a :meth:`__coerce__` method on complex
727 objects. (Removed by Meador Inge and Mark Dickinson; :issue:`5211`.)
728
729* The :meth:`str.format` method now supports automatic numbering of the replacement
730 fields. This makes using :meth:`str.format` more closely resemble using
731 ``%s`` formatting::
732
733 >>> '{}:{}:{}'.format(2009, 04, 'Sunday')
734 '2009:4:Sunday'
735 >>> '{}:{}:{day}'.format(2009, 4, day='Sunday')
736 '2009:4:Sunday'
737
738 The auto-numbering takes the fields from left to right, so the first ``{...}``
739 specifier will use the first argument to :meth:`str.format`, the next
740 specifier will use the next argument, and so on. You can't mix auto-numbering
741 and explicit numbering -- either number all of your specifier fields or none
742 of them -- but you can mix auto-numbering and named fields, as in the second
743 example above. (Contributed by Eric Smith; :issue:`5237`.)
744
745 Complex numbers now correctly support usage with :func:`format`,
746 and default to being right-aligned.
747 Specifying a precision or comma-separation applies to both the real
748 and imaginary parts of the number, but a specified field width and
749 alignment is applied to the whole of the resulting ``1.5+3j``
750 output. (Contributed by Eric Smith; :issue:`1588` and :issue:`7988`.)
751
752 The 'F' format code now always formats its output using uppercase characters,
753 so it will now produce 'INF' and 'NAN'.
754 (Contributed by Eric Smith; :issue:`3382`.)
755
756 A low-level change: the :meth:`object.__format__` method now triggers
757 a :exc:`PendingDeprecationWarning` if it's passed a format string,
758 because the :meth:`__format__` method for :class:`object` converts
759 the object to a string representation and formats that. Previously
760 the method silently applied the format string to the string
761 representation, but that could hide mistakes in Python code. If
762 you're supplying formatting information such as an alignment or
763 precision, presumably you're expecting the formatting to be applied
764 in some object-specific way. (Fixed by Eric Smith; :issue:`7994`.)
765
766* The :func:`int` and :func:`long` types gained a ``bit_length``
767 method that returns the number of bits necessary to represent
768 its argument in binary::
769
770 >>> n = 37
771 >>> bin(n)
772 '0b100101'
773 >>> n.bit_length()
774 6
775 >>> n = 2**123-1
776 >>> n.bit_length()
777 123
778 >>> (n+1).bit_length()
779 124
780
781 (Contributed by Fredrik Johansson and Victor Stinner; :issue:`3439`.)
782
783* The :keyword:`import` statement will no longer try a relative import
784 if an absolute import (e.g. ``from .os import sep``) fails. This
785 fixes a bug, but could possibly break certain :keyword:`import`
786 statements that were only working by accident. (Fixed by Meador Inge;
787 :issue:`7902`.)
788
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +0000789* It's now possible for a subclass of the built-in :class:`unicode` type
790 to override the :meth:`__unicode__` method. (Implemented by
791 Victor Stinner; :issue:`1583863`.)
792
793* The :class:`bytearray` type's :meth:`~bytearray.translate` method now accepts
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +0000794 ``None`` as its first argument. (Fixed by Georg Brandl;
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +0000795 :issue:`4759`.)
Mark Dickinsond72c7b62009-03-20 16:00:49 +0000796
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +0000797 .. bytearray doesn't seem to be documented
798
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +0000799* When using ``@classmethod`` and ``@staticmethod`` to wrap
800 methods as class or static methods, the wrapper object now
801 exposes the wrapped function as their :attr:`__func__` attribute.
802 (Contributed by Amaury Forgeot d'Arc, after a suggestion by
803 George Sakkis; :issue:`5982`.)
804
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000805* When a restricted set of attributes were set using ``__slots__``,
806 deleting an unset attribute would not raise :exc:`AttributeError`
807 as you would expect. Fixed by Benjamin Peterson; :issue:`7604`.)
808
809* Two new encodings are now supported: "cp720", used primarily for
810 Arabic text; and "cp858", a variant of CP 850 that adds the euro
811 symbol. (CP720 contributed by Alexander Belchenko and Amaury
812 Forgeot d'Arc in :issue:`1616979`; CP858 contributed by Tim Hatch in
813 :issue:`8016`.)
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +0000814
Benjamin Peterson9eea4802009-12-31 03:31:15 +0000815* The :class:`file` object will now set the :attr:`filename` attribute
816 on the :exc:`IOError` exception when trying to open a directory
Benjamin Peterson9895f912010-03-21 22:05:32 +0000817 on POSIX platforms (noted by Jan Kaliszewski; :issue:`4764`), and
818 now explicitly checks for and forbids writing to read-only file objects
819 instead of trusting the C library to catch and report the error
820 (fixed by Stefan Krah; :issue:`5677`).
Benjamin Peterson9eea4802009-12-31 03:31:15 +0000821
Benjamin Petersona28e7022010-01-09 18:53:06 +0000822* The Python tokenizer now translates line endings itself, so the
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000823 :func:`compile` built-in function now accepts code using any
Benjamin Petersona28e7022010-01-09 18:53:06 +0000824 line-ending convention. Additionally, it no longer requires that the
825 code end in a newline.
826
Benjamin Peterson9eea4802009-12-31 03:31:15 +0000827* Extra parentheses in function definitions are illegal in Python 3.x,
828 meaning that you get a syntax error from ``def f((x)): pass``. In
829 Python3-warning mode, Python 2.7 will now warn about this odd usage.
830 (Noted by James Lingard; :issue:`7362`.)
831
Ezio Melotti11d22dc2010-04-20 09:55:05 +0000832* It's now possible to create weak references to old-style class
833 objects. New-style classes were always weak-referenceable. (Fixed
834 by Antoine Pitrou; :issue:`8268`.)
835
Benjamin Peterson9895f912010-03-21 22:05:32 +0000836* When a module object is garbage-collected, the module's dictionary is
837 now only cleared if no one else is holding a reference to the
838 dictionary (:issue:`7140`).
839
Benjamin Petersonf10a79a2008-10-11 00:49:57 +0000840.. ======================================================================
841
Benjamin Peterson08bf91c2010-04-11 16:12:57 +0000842.. _new-27-interpreter:
843
844Interpreter Changes
845-------------------------------
846
847A new environment variable, :envvar:`PYTHONWARNINGS`,
848allows controlling warnings. It should be set to a string
849containing warning settings, equivalent to those
850used with the :option:`-W` switch, separated by commas.
851(Contributed by Brian Curtin; :issue:`7301`.)
852
853For example, the following setting will print warnings every time
854they occur, but turn warnings from the :mod:`Cookie` module into an
855error. (The exact syntax for setting an environment variable varies
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000856across operating systems and shells.)
Benjamin Peterson08bf91c2010-04-11 16:12:57 +0000857
858::
859
860 export PYTHONWARNINGS=all,error:::Cookie:0
861
Benjamin Peterson08bf91c2010-04-11 16:12:57 +0000862.. ======================================================================
863
Benjamin Petersonf10a79a2008-10-11 00:49:57 +0000864
865Optimizations
866-------------
867
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +0000868Several performance enhancements have been added:
869
870.. * A new :program:`configure` option, :option:`--with-computed-gotos`,
871 compiles the main bytecode interpreter loop using a new dispatch
872 mechanism that gives speedups of up to 20%, depending on the system
873 and benchmark. The new mechanism is only supported on certain
874 compilers, such as gcc, SunPro, and icc.
Benjamin Peterson1010bf32009-01-30 04:00:29 +0000875
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +0000876* A new opcode was added to perform the initial setup for
877 :keyword:`with` statements, looking up the :meth:`__enter__` and
878 :meth:`__exit__` methods. (Contributed by Benjamin Peterson.)
879
Benjamin Peterson9eea4802009-12-31 03:31:15 +0000880* The garbage collector now performs better for one common usage
881 pattern: when many objects are being allocated without deallocating
882 any of them. This would previously take quadratic
883 time for garbage collection, but now the number of full garbage collections
884 is reduced as the number of objects on the heap grows.
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000885 The new logic only performs a full garbage collection pass when
Benjamin Peterson9eea4802009-12-31 03:31:15 +0000886 the middle generation has been collected 10 times and when the
887 number of survivor objects from the middle generation exceeds 10% of
888 the number of objects in the oldest generation. (Suggested by Martin
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +0000889 von Löwis and implemented by Antoine Pitrou; :issue:`4074`.)
Benjamin Peterson1010bf32009-01-30 04:00:29 +0000890
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +0000891* The garbage collector tries to avoid tracking simple containers
892 which can't be part of a cycle. In Python 2.7, this is now true for
893 tuples and dicts containing atomic types (such as ints, strings,
894 etc.). Transitively, a dict containing tuples of atomic types won't
895 be tracked either. This helps reduce the cost of each
896 garbage collection by decreasing the number of objects to be
897 considered and traversed by the collector.
Antoine Pitrou9d81def2009-03-28 19:20:09 +0000898 (Contributed by Antoine Pitrou; :issue:`4688`.)
899
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +0000900* Long integers are now stored internally either in base 2**15 or in base
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +0000901 2**30, the base being determined at build time. Previously, they
902 were always stored in base 2**15. Using base 2**30 gives
903 significant performance improvements on 64-bit machines, but
904 benchmark results on 32-bit machines have been mixed. Therefore,
905 the default is to use base 2**30 on 64-bit machines and base 2**15
906 on 32-bit machines; on Unix, there's a new configure option
907 :option:`--enable-big-digits` that can be used to override this default.
908
909 Apart from the performance improvements this change should be
910 invisible to end users, with one exception: for testing and
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +0000911 debugging purposes there's a new structseq :data:`sys.long_info` that
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +0000912 provides information about the internal format, giving the number of
913 bits per digit and the size in bytes of the C type used to store
914 each digit::
915
916 >>> import sys
917 >>> sys.long_info
918 sys.long_info(bits_per_digit=30, sizeof_digit=4)
919
920 (Contributed by Mark Dickinson; :issue:`4258`.)
921
922 Another set of changes made long objects a few bytes smaller: 2 bytes
923 smaller on 32-bit systems and 6 bytes on 64-bit.
924 (Contributed by Mark Dickinson; :issue:`5260`.)
925
926* The division algorithm for long integers has been made faster
927 by tightening the inner loop, doing shifts instead of multiplications,
928 and fixing an unnecessary extra iteration.
929 Various benchmarks show speedups of between 50% and 150% for long
930 integer divisions and modulo operations.
931 (Contributed by Mark Dickinson; :issue:`5512`.)
Benjamin Petersona28e7022010-01-09 18:53:06 +0000932 Bitwise operations are also significantly faster (initial patch by
933 Gregory Smith; :issue:`1087418`).
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +0000934
935* The implementation of ``%`` checks for the left-side operand being
936 a Python string and special-cases it; this results in a 1-3%
937 performance increase for applications that frequently use ``%``
938 with strings, such as templating libraries.
939 (Implemented by Collin Winter; :issue:`5176`.)
940
941* List comprehensions with an ``if`` condition are compiled into
942 faster bytecode. (Patch by Antoine Pitrou, back-ported to 2.7
943 by Jeffrey Yasskin; :issue:`4715`.)
Benjamin Petersonf10a79a2008-10-11 00:49:57 +0000944
Benjamin Petersona28e7022010-01-09 18:53:06 +0000945* Converting an integer or long integer to a decimal string was made
946 faster by special-casing base 10 instead of using a generalized
947 conversion function that supports arbitrary bases.
948 (Patch by Gawain Bolton; :issue:`6713`.)
949
Benjamin Petersond69fe2a2010-02-03 02:59:43 +0000950* The :meth:`split`, :meth:`replace`, :meth:`rindex`,
951 :meth:`rpartition`, and :meth:`rsplit` methods of string-like types
952 (strings, Unicode strings, and :class:`bytearray` objects) now use a
953 fast reverse-search algorithm instead of a character-by-character
954 scan. This is sometimes faster by a factor of 10. (Added by
955 Florent Xicluna; :issue:`7462` and :issue:`7622`.)
Benjamin Petersona28e7022010-01-09 18:53:06 +0000956
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +0000957* The :mod:`pickle` and :mod:`cPickle` modules now automatically
958 intern the strings used for attribute names, reducing memory usage
959 of the objects resulting from unpickling. (Contributed by Jake
960 McGuire; :issue:`5084`.)
961
962* The :mod:`cPickle` module now special-cases dictionaries,
963 nearly halving the time required to pickle them.
964 (Contributed by Collin Winter; :issue:`5670`.)
965
Benjamin Petersonf10a79a2008-10-11 00:49:57 +0000966.. ======================================================================
967
Georg Brandl4d131ee2009-11-18 18:53:14 +0000968New and Improved Modules
969========================
Benjamin Petersonf10a79a2008-10-11 00:49:57 +0000970
971As in every release, Python's standard library received a number of
972enhancements and bug fixes. Here's a partial list of the most notable
973changes, sorted alphabetically by module name. Consult the
974:file:`Misc/NEWS` file in the source tree for a more complete list of
975changes, or look through the Subversion logs for all the details.
976
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +0000977* The :mod:`bdb` module's base debugging class :class:`~bdb.Bdb`
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +0000978 gained a feature for skipping modules. The constructor
979 now takes an iterable containing glob-style patterns such as
980 ``django.*``; the debugger will not step into stack frames
981 from a module that matches one of these patterns.
982 (Contributed by Maru Newby after a suggestion by
983 Senthil Kumaran; :issue:`5142`.)
984
Benjamin Peterson9895f912010-03-21 22:05:32 +0000985* The :mod:`binascii` module now supports the buffer API, so it can be
986 used with :class:`memoryview` instances and other similar buffer objects.
987 (Backported from 3.x by Florent Xicluna; :issue:`7703`.)
988
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +0000989* Updated module: the :mod:`bsddb` module has been updated from 4.7.2devel9
990 to version 4.8.4 of
991 `the pybsddb package <http://www.jcea.es/programacion/pybsddb.htm>`__.
992 The new version features better Python 3.x compatibility, various bug fixes,
993 and adds several new BerkeleyDB flags and methods.
994 (Updated by Jesús Cea Avión; :issue:`8156`. The pybsddb
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000995 changelog can be read at http://hg.jcea.es/pybsddb/file/tip/ChangeLog.)
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +0000996
997* The :mod:`bz2` module's :class:`~bz2.BZ2File` now supports the context
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000998 management protocol, so you can write ``with bz2.BZ2File(...) as f:``.
999 (Contributed by Hagen Fürstenau; :issue:`3860`.)
Benjamin Peterson1010bf32009-01-30 04:00:29 +00001000
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001001* New class: the :class:`~collections.Counter` class in the :mod:`collections`
1002 module is useful for tallying data. :class:`~collections.Counter` instances
1003 behave mostly like dictionaries but return zero for missing keys instead of
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +00001004 raising a :exc:`KeyError`:
Benjamin Peterson1010bf32009-01-30 04:00:29 +00001005
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +00001006 .. doctest::
1007 :options: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
1008
1009 >>> from collections import Counter
1010 >>> c = Counter()
1011 >>> for letter in 'here is a sample of english text':
1012 ... c[letter] += 1
1013 ...
1014 >>> c
1015 Counter({' ': 6, 'e': 5, 's': 3, 'a': 2, 'i': 2, 'h': 2,
1016 'l': 2, 't': 2, 'g': 1, 'f': 1, 'm': 1, 'o': 1, 'n': 1,
1017 'p': 1, 'r': 1, 'x': 1})
1018 >>> c['e']
1019 5
1020 >>> c['z']
1021 0
Benjamin Peterson1010bf32009-01-30 04:00:29 +00001022
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001023 There are three additional :class:`~collections.Counter` methods.
Ezio Melotti11d22dc2010-04-20 09:55:05 +00001024 :meth:`~collections.Counter.most_common` returns the N most common
1025 elements and their counts. :meth:`~collections.Counter.elements`
1026 returns an iterator over the contained elements, repeating each
1027 element as many times as its count.
1028 :meth:`~collections.Counter.subtract` takes an iterable and
1029 subtracts one for each element instead of adding; if the argument is
1030 a dictionary or another :class:`Counter`, the counts are
1031 subtracted. ::
Benjamin Peterson1010bf32009-01-30 04:00:29 +00001032
1033 >>> c.most_common(5)
1034 [(' ', 6), ('e', 5), ('s', 3), ('a', 2), ('i', 2)]
1035 >>> c.elements() ->
1036 'a', 'a', ' ', ' ', ' ', ' ', ' ', ' ',
1037 'e', 'e', 'e', 'e', 'e', 'g', 'f', 'i', 'i',
1038 'h', 'h', 'm', 'l', 'l', 'o', 'n', 'p', 's',
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +00001039 's', 's', 'r', 't', 't', 'x'
Ezio Melotti11d22dc2010-04-20 09:55:05 +00001040 >>> c['e']
1041 5
1042 >>> c.subtract('very heavy on the letter e')
1043 >>> c['e'] # Count is now lower
1044 -1
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001045
Benjamin Peterson1010bf32009-01-30 04:00:29 +00001046 Contributed by Raymond Hettinger; :issue:`1696199`.
1047
Ezio Melotti11d22dc2010-04-20 09:55:05 +00001048 .. revision 79660
1049
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001050 New class: :class:`~collections.OrderedDict` is described in the earlier
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001051 section :ref:`pep-0372`.
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001052
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001053 New method: The :class:`~collections.deque` data type now has a
1054 :meth:`~collections.deque.count` method that returns the number of
1055 contained elements equal to the supplied argument *x*, and a
1056 :meth:`~collections.deque.reverse` method that reverses the elements
1057 of the deque in-place. :class:`deque` also exposes its maximum
1058 length as the read-only :attr:`~collections.deque.maxlen` attribute.
1059 (Both features added by Raymond Hettinger.)
1060
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001061 The :class:`~collections.namedtuple` class now has an optional *rename* parameter.
Benjamin Petersonf47ed4a2009-04-11 20:45:40 +00001062 If *rename* is true, field names that are invalid because they've
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001063 been repeated or aren't legal Python identifiers will be
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +00001064 renamed to legal names that are derived from the field's
1065 position within the list of fields:
1066
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +00001067 >>> from collections import namedtuple
1068 >>> T = namedtuple('T', ['field1', '$illegal', 'for', 'field2'], rename=True)
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +00001069 >>> T._fields
1070 ('field1', '_1', '_2', 'field2')
1071
1072 (Added by Raymond Hettinger; :issue:`1818`.)
1073
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001074 Finally, the :class:`~collections.Mapping` abstract base class now
Georg Brandlb0f09912010-07-05 17:48:38 +00001075 returns :const:`NotImplemented` if a mapping is compared to
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001076 another type that isn't a :class:`Mapping`.
1077 (Fixed by Daniel Stutzbach; :issue:`8729`.)
1078
1079* Constructors for the parsing classes in the :mod:`ConfigParser` module now
1080 take a *allow_no_value* parameter, defaulting to false; if true,
1081 options without values will be allowed. For example::
1082
1083 >>> import ConfigParser, StringIO
1084 >>> sample_config = """
1085 ... [mysqld]
1086 ... user = mysql
1087 ... pid-file = /var/run/mysqld/mysqld.pid
1088 ... skip-bdb
1089 ... """
1090 >>> config = ConfigParser.RawConfigParser(allow_no_value=True)
1091 >>> config.readfp(StringIO.StringIO(sample_config))
1092 >>> config.get('mysqld', 'user')
1093 'mysql'
1094 >>> print config.get('mysqld', 'skip-bdb')
1095 None
1096 >>> print config.get('mysqld', 'unknown')
1097 Traceback (most recent call last):
1098 ...
1099 NoOptionError: No option 'unknown' in section: 'mysqld'
1100
1101 (Contributed by Mats Kindahl; :issue:`7005`.)
1102
1103* Deprecated function: :func:`contextlib.nested`, which allows
1104 handling more than one context manager with a single :keyword:`with`
1105 statement, has been deprecated, because the :keyword:`with` statement
1106 now supports multiple context managers.
1107
1108* The :mod:`cookielib` module now ignores cookies that have an invalid
1109 version field, one that doesn't contain an integer value. (Fixed by
1110 John J. Lee; :issue:`3924`.)
Benjamin Peterson9eea4802009-12-31 03:31:15 +00001111
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001112* The :mod:`copy` module's :func:`~copy.deepcopy` function will now
Benjamin Peterson9eea4802009-12-31 03:31:15 +00001113 correctly copy bound instance methods. (Implemented by
1114 Robert Collins; :issue:`1515`.)
Benjamin Petersonf47ed4a2009-04-11 20:45:40 +00001115
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001116* The :mod:`ctypes` module now always converts ``None`` to a C NULL
1117 pointer for arguments declared as pointers. (Changed by Thomas
Benjamin Peterson9895f912010-03-21 22:05:32 +00001118 Heller; :issue:`4606`.) The underlying `libffi library
1119 <http://sourceware.org/libffi/>`__ has been updated to version
1120 3.0.9, containing various fixes for different platforms. (Updated
1121 by Matthias Klose; :issue:`8142`.)
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001122
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001123* New method: the :mod:`datetime` module's :class:`~datetime.timedelta` class
1124 gained a :meth:`~datetime.timedelta.total_seconds` method that returns the
1125 number of seconds in the duration. (Contributed by Brian Quinlan; :issue:`5788`.)
Benjamin Peterson9eea4802009-12-31 03:31:15 +00001126
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001127* New method: the :class:`~decimal.Decimal` class gained a
1128 :meth:`~decimal.Decimal.from_float` class method that performs an exact
1129 conversion of a floating-point number to a :class:`~decimal.Decimal`.
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001130 This exact conversion strives for the
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001131 closest decimal approximation to the floating-point representation's value;
1132 the resulting decimal value will therefore still include the inaccuracy,
1133 if any.
1134 For example, ``Decimal.from_float(0.1)`` returns
1135 ``Decimal('0.1000000000000000055511151231257827021181583404541015625')``.
1136 (Implemented by Raymond Hettinger; :issue:`4796`.)
1137
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001138 Comparing instances of :class:`Decimal` with floating-point
1139 numbers now produces sensible results based on the numeric values
1140 of the operands. Previously such comparisons would fall back to
1141 Python's default rules for comparing objects, which produced arbitrary
1142 results based on their type. Note that you still cannot combine
1143 :class:`Decimal` and floating-point in other operations such as addition,
1144 since you should be explicitly choosing how to convert between float and
1145 :class:`Decimal`.
1146 (Fixed by Mark Dickinson; :issue:`2531`.)
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001147
Ezio Melotti11d22dc2010-04-20 09:55:05 +00001148 The constructor for :class:`~decimal.Decimal` now accepts
1149 floating-point numbers (added by Raymond Hettinger; :issue:`8257`)
1150 and non-European Unicode characters such as Arabic-Indic digits
1151 (contributed by Mark Dickinson; :issue:`6595`).
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001152
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001153 Most of the methods of the :class:`~decimal.Context` class now accept integers
1154 as well as :class:`~decimal.Decimal` instances; the only exceptions are the
1155 :meth:`~decimal.Context.canonical` and :meth:`~decimal.Context.is_canonical`
1156 methods. (Patch by Juan José Conti; :issue:`7633`.)
1157
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001158 When using :class:`~decimal.Decimal` instances with a string's
1159 :meth:`~str.format` method, the default alignment was previously
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001160 left-alignment. This has been changed to right-alignment, which is
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001161 more sensible for numeric types. (Changed by Mark Dickinson; :issue:`6857`.)
1162
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001163 Comparisons involving a signaling NaN value (or ``sNAN``) now signal
1164 :const:`InvalidOperation` instead of silently returning a true or
1165 false value depending on the comparison operator. Quiet NaN values
1166 (or ``NaN``) are now hashable. (Fixed by Mark Dickinson;
1167 :issue:`7279`.)
1168
Ezio Melotti11d22dc2010-04-20 09:55:05 +00001169* The :mod:`difflib` module now produces output that is more
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001170 compatible with modern :command:`diff`/:command:`patch` tools
1171 through one small change, using a tab character instead of spaces as
1172 a separator in the header giving the filename. (Fixed by Anatoly
1173 Techtonik; :issue:`7585`.)
1174
1175* The Distutils ``sdist`` command now always regenerates the
1176 :file:`MANIFEST` file, since even if the :file:`MANIFEST.in` or
1177 :file:`setup.py` files haven't been modified, the user might have
1178 created some new files that should be included.
1179 (Fixed by Tarek Ziadé; :issue:`8688`.)
1180
1181* The :mod:`doctest` module's :const:`IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL` flag
1182 will now ignore the name of the module containing the exception
1183 being tested. (Patch by Lennart Regebro; :issue:`7490`.)
1184
1185* The :mod:`email` module's :class:`~email.message.Message` class will
1186 now accept a Unicode-valued payload, automatically converting the
1187 payload to the encoding specified by :attr:`output_charset`.
1188 (Added by R. David Murray; :issue:`1368247`.)
Ezio Melotti11d22dc2010-04-20 09:55:05 +00001189
1190* The :class:`~fractions.Fraction` class now accepts a single float or
1191 :class:`~decimal.Decimal` instance, or two rational numbers, as
1192 arguments to its constructor. (Implemented by Mark Dickinson;
1193 rationals added in :issue:`5812`, and float/decimal in
1194 :issue:`8294`.)
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +00001195
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001196 Ordering comparisons (``<``, ``<=``, ``>``, ``>=``) between
Benjamin Peterson08bf91c2010-04-11 16:12:57 +00001197 fractions and complex numbers now raise a :exc:`TypeError`.
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001198 This fixes an oversight, making the :class:`Fraction` match the other
1199 numeric types.
Benjamin Peterson08bf91c2010-04-11 16:12:57 +00001200
1201 .. revision 79455
1202
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001203* New class: :class:`~ftplib.FTP_TLS` in
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001204 the :mod:`ftplib` module provides secure FTP
Benjamin Peterson9eea4802009-12-31 03:31:15 +00001205 connections using TLS encapsulation of authentication as well as
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001206 subsequent control and data transfers.
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001207 (Contributed by Giampaolo Rodola; :issue:`2054`.)
Benjamin Peterson9eea4802009-12-31 03:31:15 +00001208
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001209 The :meth:`~ftplib.FTP.storbinary` method for binary uploads can now restart
1210 uploads thanks to an added *rest* parameter (patch by Pablo Mouzo;
1211 :issue:`6845`.)
1212
Benjamin Peterson08bf91c2010-04-11 16:12:57 +00001213* New class decorator: :func:`total_ordering` in the :mod:`functools`
1214 module takes a class that defines an :meth:`__eq__` method and one of
1215 :meth:`__lt__`, :meth:`__le__`, :meth:`__gt__`, or :meth:`__ge__`,
1216 and generates the missing comparison methods. Since the
1217 :meth:`__cmp__` method is being deprecated in Python 3.x,
1218 this decorator makes it easier to define ordered classes.
1219 (Added by Raymond Hettinger; :issue:`5479`.)
1220
1221 New function: :func:`cmp_to_key` will take an old-style comparison
1222 function that expects two arguments and return a new callable that
1223 can be used as the *key* parameter to functions such as
1224 :func:`sorted`, :func:`min` and :func:`max`, etc. The primary
1225 intended use is to help with making code compatible with Python 3.x.
1226 (Added by Raymond Hettinger.)
1227
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001228* New function: the :mod:`gc` module's :func:`~gc.is_tracked` returns
Benjamin Petersonf47ed4a2009-04-11 20:45:40 +00001229 true if a given instance is tracked by the garbage collector, false
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +00001230 otherwise. (Contributed by Antoine Pitrou; :issue:`4688`.)
1231
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001232* The :mod:`gzip` module's :class:`~gzip.GzipFile` now supports the context
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001233 management protocol, so you can write ``with gzip.GzipFile(...) as f:``
1234 (contributed by Hagen Fürstenau; :issue:`3860`), and it now implements
Benjamin Peterson9895f912010-03-21 22:05:32 +00001235 the :class:`io.BufferedIOBase` ABC, so you can wrap it with
1236 :class:`io.BufferedReader` for faster processing
1237 (contributed by Nir Aides; :issue:`7471`).
1238 It's also now possible to override the modification time
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +00001239 recorded in a gzipped file by providing an optional timestamp to
1240 the constructor. (Contributed by Jacques Frechet; :issue:`4272`.)
Benjamin Peterson1010bf32009-01-30 04:00:29 +00001241
Benjamin Petersond69fe2a2010-02-03 02:59:43 +00001242 Files in gzip format can be padded with trailing zero bytes; the
1243 :mod:`gzip` module will now consume these trailing bytes. (Fixed by
1244 Tadek Pietraszek and Brian Curtin; :issue:`2846`.)
1245
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001246* New attribute: the :mod:`hashlib` module now has an :attr:`~hashlib.hashlib.algorithms`
1247 attribute containing a tuple naming the supported algorithms.
1248 In Python 2.7, ``hashlib.algorithms`` contains
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001249 ``('md5', 'sha1', 'sha224', 'sha256', 'sha384', 'sha512')``.
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001250 (Contributed by Carl Chenet; :issue:`7418`.)
1251
1252* The default :class:`~httplib.HTTPResponse` class used by the :mod:`httplib` module now
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001253 supports buffering, resulting in much faster reading of HTTP responses.
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001254 (Contributed by Kristján Valur Jónsson; :issue:`4879`.)
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001255
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001256 The :class:`~httplib.HTTPConnection` and :class:`~httplib.HTTPSConnection` classes
Benjamin Peterson9895f912010-03-21 22:05:32 +00001257 now support a *source_address* parameter, a ``(host, port)`` 2-tuple
1258 giving the source address that will be used for the connection.
1259 (Contributed by Eldon Ziegler; :issue:`3972`.)
1260
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001261* The :mod:`ihooks` module now supports relative imports. Note that
1262 :mod:`ihooks` is an older module for customizing imports,
1263 superseded by the :mod:`imputil` module added in Python 2.0.
1264 (Relative import support added by Neil Schemenauer.)
1265
1266 .. revision 75423
1267
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001268* The :mod:`imaplib` module now supports IPv6 addresses.
1269 (Contributed by Derek Morr; :issue:`1655`.)
1270
Ezio Melotti11d22dc2010-04-20 09:55:05 +00001271* New function: the :mod:`inspect` module's :func:`~inspect.getcallargs`
1272 takes a callable and its positional and keyword arguments,
1273 and figures out which of the callable's parameters will receive each argument,
1274 returning a dictionary mapping argument names to their values. For example::
1275
1276 >>> from inspect import getcallargs
1277 >>> def f(a, b=1, *pos, **named):
1278 ... pass
1279 >>> getcallargs(f, 1, 2, 3)
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001280 {'a': 1, 'b': 2, 'pos': (3,), 'named': {}}
Ezio Melotti11d22dc2010-04-20 09:55:05 +00001281 >>> getcallargs(f, a=2, x=4)
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001282 {'a': 2, 'b': 1, 'pos': (), 'named': {'x': 4}}
Ezio Melotti11d22dc2010-04-20 09:55:05 +00001283 >>> getcallargs(f)
1284 Traceback (most recent call last):
1285 ...
1286 TypeError: f() takes at least 1 argument (0 given)
1287
1288 Contributed by George Sakkis; :issue:`3135`.
1289
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001290* Updated module: The :mod:`io` library has been upgraded to the version shipped with
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001291 Python 3.1. For 3.1, the I/O library was entirely rewritten in C
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001292 and is 2 to 20 times faster depending on the task being performed. The
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001293 original Python version was renamed to the :mod:`_pyio` module.
1294
1295 One minor resulting change: the :class:`io.TextIOBase` class now
1296 has an :attr:`errors` attribute giving the error setting
1297 used for encoding and decoding errors (one of ``'strict'``, ``'replace'``,
1298 ``'ignore'``).
1299
1300 The :class:`io.FileIO` class now raises an :exc:`OSError` when passed
Benjamin Peterson1010bf32009-01-30 04:00:29 +00001301 an invalid file descriptor. (Implemented by Benjamin Peterson;
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001302 :issue:`4991`.) The :meth:`~io.IOBase.truncate` method now preserves the
Benjamin Petersond69fe2a2010-02-03 02:59:43 +00001303 file position; previously it would change the file position to the
1304 end of the new file. (Fixed by Pascal Chambon; :issue:`6939`.)
Benjamin Peterson1010bf32009-01-30 04:00:29 +00001305
Benjamin Peterson97dd9872009-12-13 01:23:39 +00001306* New function: ``itertools.compress(data, selectors)`` takes two
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +00001307 iterators. Elements of *data* are returned if the corresponding
Benjamin Petersonf47ed4a2009-04-11 20:45:40 +00001308 value in *selectors* is true::
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +00001309
1310 itertools.compress('ABCDEF', [1,0,1,0,1,1]) =>
1311 A, C, E, F
1312
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001313 .. maybe here is better to use >>> list(itertools.compress(...)) instead
1314
Benjamin Peterson97dd9872009-12-13 01:23:39 +00001315 New function: ``itertools.combinations_with_replacement(iter, r)``
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +00001316 returns all the possible *r*-length combinations of elements from the
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001317 iterable *iter*. Unlike :func:`~itertools.combinations`, individual elements
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +00001318 can be repeated in the generated combinations::
1319
1320 itertools.combinations_with_replacement('abc', 2) =>
1321 ('a', 'a'), ('a', 'b'), ('a', 'c'),
1322 ('b', 'b'), ('b', 'c'), ('c', 'c')
1323
1324 Note that elements are treated as unique depending on their position
1325 in the input, not their actual values.
1326
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001327 The :func:`itertools.count` function now has a *step* argument that
1328 allows incrementing by values other than 1. :func:`~itertools.count` also
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +00001329 now allows keyword arguments, and using non-integer values such as
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001330 floats or :class:`~decimal.Decimal` instances. (Implemented by Raymond
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +00001331 Hettinger; :issue:`5032`.)
1332
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001333 :func:`itertools.combinations` and :func:`itertools.product`
1334 previously raised :exc:`ValueError` for values of *r* larger than
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +00001335 the input iterable. This was deemed a specification error, so they
1336 now return an empty iterator. (Fixed by Raymond Hettinger; :issue:`4816`.)
1337
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001338* Updated module: The :mod:`json` module was upgraded to version 2.0.9 of the
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +00001339 simplejson package, which includes a C extension that makes
1340 encoding and decoding faster.
1341 (Contributed by Bob Ippolito; :issue:`4136`.)
1342
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001343 To support the new :class:`collections.OrderedDict` type, :func:`json.load`
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +00001344 now has an optional *object_pairs_hook* parameter that will be called
1345 with any object literal that decodes to a list of pairs.
1346 (Contributed by Raymond Hettinger; :issue:`5381`.)
1347
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001348* The :mod:`mailbox` module's :class:`Maildir` class now records the
1349 timestamp on the directories it reads, and only re-reads them if the
1350 modification time has subsequently changed. This improves
1351 performance by avoiding unneeded directory scans. (Fixed by
1352 A.M. Kuchling and Antoine Pitrou; :issue:`1607951`, :issue:`6896`.)
1353
Benjamin Peterson9eea4802009-12-31 03:31:15 +00001354* New functions: the :mod:`math` module gained
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001355 :func:`~math.erf` and :func:`~math.erfc` for the error function and the complementary error function,
1356 :func:`~math.expm1` which computes ``e**x - 1`` with more precision than
1357 using :func:`~math.exp` and subtracting 1,
1358 :func:`~math.gamma` for the Gamma function, and
1359 :func:`~math.lgamma` for the natural log of the Gamma function.
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001360 (Contributed by Mark Dickinson and nirinA raseliarison; :issue:`3366`.)
1361
Benjamin Petersonf47ed4a2009-04-11 20:45:40 +00001362* The :mod:`multiprocessing` module's :class:`Manager*` classes
1363 can now be passed a callable that will be called whenever
1364 a subprocess is started, along with a set of arguments that will be
1365 passed to the callable.
1366 (Contributed by lekma; :issue:`5585`.)
1367
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001368 The :class:`~multiprocessing.Pool` class, which controls a pool of worker processes,
Benjamin Petersond69fe2a2010-02-03 02:59:43 +00001369 now has an optional *maxtasksperchild* parameter. Worker processes
1370 will perform the specified number of tasks and then exit, causing the
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001371 :class:`~multiprocessing.Pool` to start a new worker. This is useful if tasks may leak
Benjamin Petersond69fe2a2010-02-03 02:59:43 +00001372 memory or other resources, or if some tasks will cause the worker to
1373 become very large.
1374 (Contributed by Charles Cazabon; :issue:`6963`.)
1375
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001376* The :mod:`nntplib` module now supports IPv6 addresses.
1377 (Contributed by Derek Morr; :issue:`1664`.)
1378
Benjamin Peterson9eea4802009-12-31 03:31:15 +00001379* New functions: the :mod:`os` module wraps the following POSIX system
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001380 calls: :func:`~os.getresgid` and :func:`~os.getresuid`, which return the
Benjamin Peterson9eea4802009-12-31 03:31:15 +00001381 real, effective, and saved GIDs and UIDs;
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001382 :func:`~os.setresgid` and :func:`~os.setresuid`, which set
Benjamin Peterson9eea4802009-12-31 03:31:15 +00001383 real, effective, and saved GIDs and UIDs to new values;
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001384 :func:`~os.initgroups`, which initialize the group access list
1385 for the current process. (GID/UID functions
Benjamin Peterson9eea4802009-12-31 03:31:15 +00001386 contributed by Travis H.; :issue:`6508`. Support for initgroups added
1387 by Jean-Paul Calderone; :issue:`7333`.)
1388
Benjamin Peterson9895f912010-03-21 22:05:32 +00001389 The :func:`os.fork` function now re-initializes the import lock in
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001390 the child process; this fixes problems on Solaris when :func:`~os.fork`
Benjamin Peterson9895f912010-03-21 22:05:32 +00001391 is called from a thread. (Fixed by Zsolt Cserna; :issue:`7242`.)
1392
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001393* In the :mod:`os.path` module, the :func:`~os.path.normpath` and
1394 :func:`~os.path.abspath` functions now preserve Unicode; if their input path
Benjamin Petersond69fe2a2010-02-03 02:59:43 +00001395 is a Unicode string, the return value is also a Unicode string.
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001396 (:meth:`~os.path.normpath` fixed by Matt Giuca in :issue:`5827`;
1397 :meth:`~os.path.abspath` fixed by Ezio Melotti in :issue:`3426`.)
Benjamin Petersond69fe2a2010-02-03 02:59:43 +00001398
Benjamin Peterson1010bf32009-01-30 04:00:29 +00001399* The :mod:`pydoc` module now has help for the various symbols that Python
1400 uses. You can now do ``help('<<')`` or ``help('@')``, for example.
1401 (Contributed by David Laban; :issue:`4739`.)
1402
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001403* The :mod:`re` module's :func:`~re.split`, :func:`~re.sub`, and :func:`~re.subn`
Benjamin Petersonf47ed4a2009-04-11 20:45:40 +00001404 now accept an optional *flags* argument, for consistency with the
1405 other functions in the module. (Added by Gregory P. Smith.)
1406
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001407* New function: :func:`~runpy.run_path` in the :mod:`runpy` module
1408 will execute the code at a provided *path* argument. *path* can be
1409 the path of a Python source file (:file:`example.py`), a compiled
1410 bytecode file (:file:`example.pyc`), a directory
1411 (:file:`./package/`), or a zip archive (:file:`example.zip`). If a
1412 directory or zip path is provided, it will be added to the front of
1413 ``sys.path`` and the module :mod:`__main__` will be imported. It's
1414 expected that the directory or zip contains a :file:`__main__.py`;
1415 if it doesn't, some other :file:`__main__.py` might be imported from
Nick Coghlan9fc68c42010-07-02 15:57:50 +00001416 a location later in ``sys.path``. This makes more of the machinery
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001417 of :mod:`runpy` available to scripts that want to mimic the way
Nick Coghlan9fc68c42010-07-02 15:57:50 +00001418 Python's command line processes an explicit path name.
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001419 (Added by Nick Coghlan; :issue:`6816`.)
1420
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001421* New function: in the :mod:`shutil` module, :func:`~shutil.make_archive`
1422 takes a filename, archive type (zip or tar-format), and a directory
1423 path, and creates an archive containing the directory's contents.
1424 (Added by Tarek Ziadé.)
1425
1426 :mod:`shutil`'s :func:`~shutil.copyfile` and :func:`~shutil.copytree`
1427 functions now raise a :exc:`~shutil.SpecialFileError` exception when
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001428 asked to copy a named pipe. Previously the code would treat
1429 named pipes like a regular file by opening them for reading, and
1430 this would block indefinitely. (Fixed by Antoine Pitrou; :issue:`3002`.)
1431
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001432* The :mod:`signal` module no longer re-installs the signal handler
1433 unless this is truly necessary, which fixes a bug that could make it
1434 impossible to catch the EINTR signal robustly. (Fixed by
1435 Charles-Francois Natali; :issue:`8354`.)
1436
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001437* New functions: in the :mod:`site` module, three new functions
1438 return various site- and user-specific paths.
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001439 :func:`~site.getsitepackages` returns a list containing all
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001440 global site-packages directories,
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001441 :func:`~site.getusersitepackages` returns the path of the user's
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001442 site-packages directory, and
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001443 :func:`~site.getuserbase` returns the value of the :envvar:`USER_BASE`
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001444 environment variable, giving the path to a directory that can be used
1445 to store data.
Benjamin Petersond69fe2a2010-02-03 02:59:43 +00001446 (Contributed by Tarek Ziadé; :issue:`6693`.)
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001447
Benjamin Peterson9895f912010-03-21 22:05:32 +00001448 The :mod:`site` module now reports exceptions occurring
1449 when the :mod:`sitecustomize` module is imported, and will no longer
Florent Xicluna41fe6152010-04-02 18:52:12 +00001450 catch and swallow the :exc:`KeyboardInterrupt` exception. (Fixed by
Benjamin Peterson9895f912010-03-21 22:05:32 +00001451 Victor Stinner; :issue:`3137`.)
1452
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001453* The :func:`~socket.create_connection` function
Benjamin Peterson9895f912010-03-21 22:05:32 +00001454 gained a *source_address* parameter, a ``(host, port)`` 2-tuple
1455 giving the source address that will be used for the connection.
1456 (Contributed by Eldon Ziegler; :issue:`3972`.)
1457
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001458 The :meth:`~socket.socket.recv_into` and :meth:`~socket.socket.recvfrom_into`
1459 methods will now write into objects that support the buffer API, most usefully
Benjamin Peterson9895f912010-03-21 22:05:32 +00001460 the :class:`bytearray` and :class:`memoryview` objects. (Implemented by
1461 Antoine Pitrou; :issue:`8104`.)
Benjamin Petersona28e7022010-01-09 18:53:06 +00001462
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001463* The :mod:`SocketServer` module's :class:`~SocketServer.TCPServer` class now
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001464 supports socket timeouts and disabling the Nagle algorithm.
1465 The :attr:`~SocketServer.TCPServer.disable_nagle_algorithm` class attribute
1466 defaults to False; if overridden to be True,
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001467 new request connections will have the TCP_NODELAY option set to
1468 prevent buffering many small sends into a single TCP packet.
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001469 The :attr:`~SocketServer.TCPServer.timeout` class attribute can hold
1470 a timeout in seconds that will be applied to the request socket; if
1471 no request is received within that time, :meth:`handle_timeout`
1472 will be called and :meth:`handle_request` will return.
1473 (Contributed by Kristján Valur Jónsson; :issue:`6192` and :issue:`6267`.)
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001474
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001475* Updated module: the :mod:`sqlite3` module has been updated to
Benjamin Peterson9895f912010-03-21 22:05:32 +00001476 version 2.6.0 of the `pysqlite package <http://code.google.com/p/pysqlite/>`__. Version 2.6.0 includes a number of bugfixes, and adds
1477 the ability to load SQLite extensions from shared libraries.
1478 Call the ``enable_load_extension(True)`` method to enable extensions,
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001479 and then call :meth:`~sqlite3.Connection.load_extension` to load a particular shared library.
Benjamin Peterson9895f912010-03-21 22:05:32 +00001480 (Updated by Gerhard Häring.)
1481
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001482* The :mod:`ssl` module's :class:`ssl.SSLSocket` objects now support the
1483 buffer API, which fixed a test suite failure (fix by Antoine Pitrou;
1484 :issue:`7133`) and automatically set
1485 OpenSSL's :cmacro:`SSL_MODE_AUTO_RETRY`, which will prevent an error
1486 code being returned from :meth:`recv` operations that trigger an SSL
1487 renegotiation (fix by Antoine Pitrou; :issue:`8222`).
1488
1489 The :func:`ssl.wrap_socket` constructor function now takes a
1490 *ciphers* argument that's a string listing the encryption algorithms
1491 to be allowed; the format of the string is described
1492 `in the OpenSSL documentation
1493 <http://www.openssl.org/docs/apps/ciphers.html#CIPHER_LIST_FORMAT>`__.
1494 (Added by Antoine Pitrou; :issue:`8322`.)
1495
1496 Another change makes the extension load all of OpenSSL's ciphers and
1497 digest algorithms so that they're all available. Some SSL
1498 certificates couldn't be verified, reporting an "unknown algorithm"
1499 error. (Reported by Beda Kosata, and fixed by Antoine Pitrou;
1500 :issue:`8484`.)
1501
1502 The version of OpenSSL being used is now available as the module
1503 attributes :data:`ssl.OPENSSL_VERSION` (a string),
1504 :data:`ssl.OPENSSL_VERSION_INFO` (a 5-tuple), and
1505 :data:`ssl.OPENSSL_VERSION_NUMBER` (an integer). (Added by Antoine
1506 Pitrou; :issue:`8321`.)
1507
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001508* The :mod:`struct` module will no longer silently ignore overflow
1509 errors when a value is too large for a particular integer format
1510 code (one of ``bBhHiIlLqQ``); it now always raises a
1511 :exc:`struct.error` exception. (Changed by Mark Dickinson;
Ezio Melotti11d22dc2010-04-20 09:55:05 +00001512 :issue:`1523`.) The :func:`~struct.pack` function will also
1513 attempt to use :meth:`__index__` to convert and pack non-integers
1514 before trying the :meth:`__int__` method or reporting an error.
1515 (Changed by Mark Dickinson; :issue:`8300`.)
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001516
Benjamin Petersonf47ed4a2009-04-11 20:45:40 +00001517* New function: the :mod:`subprocess` module's
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001518 :func:`~subprocess.check_output` runs a command with a specified set of arguments
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +00001519 and returns the command's output as a string when the command runs without
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001520 error, or raises a :exc:`~subprocess.CalledProcessError` exception otherwise.
Georg Brandl1f01deb2009-01-03 22:47:39 +00001521
1522 ::
1523
1524 >>> subprocess.check_output(['df', '-h', '.'])
1525 'Filesystem Size Used Avail Capacity Mounted on\n
1526 /dev/disk0s2 52G 49G 3.0G 94% /\n'
1527
1528 >>> subprocess.check_output(['df', '-h', '/bogus'])
1529 ...
1530 subprocess.CalledProcessError: Command '['df', '-h', '/bogus']' returned non-zero exit status 1
1531
1532 (Contributed by Gregory P. Smith.)
1533
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001534 The :mod:`subprocess` module will now retry its internal system calls
1535 on receiving an :const:`EINTR` signal. (Reported by several people; final
1536 patch by Gregory P. Smith in :issue:`1068268`.)
1537
1538* New function: :func:`~symtable.is_declared_global` in the :mod:`symtable` module
Benjamin Petersonf47ed4a2009-04-11 20:45:40 +00001539 returns true for variables that are explicitly declared to be global,
1540 false for ones that are implicitly global.
1541 (Contributed by Jeremy Hylton.)
1542
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001543* The :mod:`syslog` module will now use the value of ``sys.argv[0]`` as the
1544 identifier instead of the previous default value of ``'python'``.
1545 (Changed by Sean Reifschneider; :issue:`8451`.)
1546
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +00001547* The ``sys.version_info`` value is now a named tuple, with attributes
Benjamin Petersond69fe2a2010-02-03 02:59:43 +00001548 named :attr:`major`, :attr:`minor`, :attr:`micro`,
1549 :attr:`releaselevel`, and :attr:`serial`. (Contributed by Ross
1550 Light; :issue:`4285`.)
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +00001551
Benjamin Petersond69fe2a2010-02-03 02:59:43 +00001552 :func:`sys.getwindowsversion` also returns a named tuple,
Ezio Melotti0d85e412010-03-13 00:39:49 +00001553 with attributes named :attr:`major`, :attr:`minor`, :attr:`build`,
1554 :attr:`platform`, :attr:`service_pack`, :attr:`service_pack_major`,
Eric Smithb0869402010-02-03 14:25:10 +00001555 :attr:`service_pack_minor`, :attr:`suite_mask`, and
1556 :attr:`product_type`. (Contributed by Brian Curtin; :issue:`7766`.)
Benjamin Petersond69fe2a2010-02-03 02:59:43 +00001557
1558* The :mod:`tarfile` module's default error handling has changed, to
1559 no longer suppress fatal errors. The default error level was previously 0,
1560 which meant that errors would only result in a message being written to the
1561 debug log, but because the debug log is not activated by default,
1562 these errors go unnoticed. The default error level is now 1,
1563 which raises an exception if there's an error.
1564 (Changed by Lars Gustäbel; :issue:`7357`.)
1565
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001566 :mod:`tarfile` now supports filtering the :class:`~tarfile.TarInfo`
1567 objects being added to a tar file. When you call :meth:`~tarfile.TarFile.add`,
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001568 you may supply an optional *filter* argument
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001569 that's a callable. The *filter* callable will be passed the
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001570 :class:`~tarfile.TarInfo` for every file being added, and can modify and return it.
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001571 If the callable returns ``None``, the file will be excluded from the
1572 resulting archive. This is more powerful than the existing
1573 *exclude* argument, which has therefore been deprecated.
Benjamin Petersond69fe2a2010-02-03 02:59:43 +00001574 (Added by Lars Gustäbel; :issue:`6856`.)
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001575 The :class:`~tarfile.TarFile` class also now supports the context manager protocol.
Benjamin Peterson9895f912010-03-21 22:05:32 +00001576 (Added by Lars Gustäbel; :issue:`7232`.)
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001577
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001578* The :meth:`~threading.Event.wait` method of the :class:`threading.Event` class
1579 now returns the internal flag on exit. This means the method will usually
1580 return true because :meth:`~threading.Event.wait` is supposed to block until the
Benjamin Petersonf47ed4a2009-04-11 20:45:40 +00001581 internal flag becomes true. The return value will only be false if
1582 a timeout was provided and the operation timed out.
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001583 (Contributed by Tim Lesher; :issue:`1674032`.)
Benjamin Petersonf47ed4a2009-04-11 20:45:40 +00001584
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001585* The Unicode database provided by the :mod:`unicodedata` module is
1586 now used internally to determine which characters are numeric,
1587 whitespace, or represent line breaks. The database also
1588 includes information from the :file:`Unihan.txt` data file (patch
1589 by Anders Chrigström and Amaury Forgeot d'Arc; :issue:`1571184`)
1590 and has been updated to version 5.2.0 (updated by
1591 Florent Xicluna; :issue:`8024`).
Ezio Melotti4c5475d2010-03-22 23:16:42 +00001592
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001593* The :mod:`urlparse` module's :func:`~urlparse.urlsplit` now handles
1594 unknown URL schemes in a fashion compliant with :rfc:`3986`: if the
1595 URL is of the form ``"<something>://..."``, the text before the
1596 ``://`` is treated as the scheme, even if it's a made-up scheme that
1597 the module doesn't know about. This change may break code that
1598 worked around the old behaviour. For example, Python 2.6.4 or 2.5
1599 will return the following:
1600
1601 >>> import urlparse
1602 >>> urlparse.urlsplit('invented://host/filename?query')
1603 ('invented', '', '//host/filename?query', '', '')
1604
1605 Python 2.7 (and Python 2.6.5) will return:
1606
1607 >>> import urlparse
1608 >>> urlparse.urlsplit('invented://host/filename?query')
1609 ('invented', 'host', '/filename?query', '', '')
1610
1611 (Python 2.7 actually produces slightly different output, since it
1612 returns a named tuple instead of a standard tuple.)
1613
1614 The :mod:`urlparse` module also supports IPv6 literal addresses as defined by
1615 :rfc:`2732` (contributed by Senthil Kumaran; :issue:`2987`). ::
1616
1617 >>> urlparse.urlparse('http://[1080::8:800:200C:417A]/foo')
1618 ParseResult(scheme='http', netloc='[1080::8:800:200C:417A]',
1619 path='/foo', params='', query='', fragment='')
1620
1621* New class: the :class:`~weakref.WeakSet` class in the :mod:`weakref`
1622 module is a set that only holds weak references to its elements; elements
1623 will be removed once there are no references pointing to them.
1624 (Originally implemented in Python 3.x by Raymond Hettinger, and backported
1625 to 2.7 by Michael Foord.)
Benjamin Petersond69fe2a2010-02-03 02:59:43 +00001626
Benjamin Peterson9895f912010-03-21 22:05:32 +00001627* The ElementTree library, :mod:`xml.etree`, no longer escapes
1628 ampersands and angle brackets when outputting an XML processing
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001629 instruction (which looks like ``<?xml-stylesheet href="#style1"?>``)
1630 or comment (which looks like ``<!-- comment -->``).
Benjamin Peterson9895f912010-03-21 22:05:32 +00001631 (Patch by Neil Muller; :issue:`2746`.)
1632
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001633* The XML-RPC client and server, provided by the :mod:`xmlrpclib` and
1634 :mod:`SimpleXMLRPCServer` modules, have improved performance by
1635 supporting HTTP/1.1 keep-alive and by optionally using gzip encoding
1636 to compress the XML being exchanged. The gzip compression is
1637 controlled by the :attr:`encode_threshold` attribute of
1638 :class:`SimpleXMLRPCRequestHandler`, which contains a size in bytes;
1639 responses larger than this will be compressed.
1640 (Contributed by Kristján Valur Jónsson; :issue:`6267`.)
1641
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001642* The :mod:`zipfile` module's :class:`~zipfile.ZipFile` now supports the context
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001643 management protocol, so you can write ``with zipfile.ZipFile(...) as f:``.
Benjamin Petersond69fe2a2010-02-03 02:59:43 +00001644 (Contributed by Brian Curtin; :issue:`5511`.)
Benjamin Petersonf10a79a2008-10-11 00:49:57 +00001645
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001646 :mod:`zipfile` now also supports archiving empty directories and
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +00001647 extracts them correctly. (Fixed by Kuba Wieczorek; :issue:`4710`.)
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001648 Reading files out of an archive is faster, and interleaving
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001649 :meth:`~zipfile.ZipFile.read` and :meth:`~zipfile.ZipFile.readline` now works correctly.
Benjamin Petersond69fe2a2010-02-03 02:59:43 +00001650 (Contributed by Nir Aides; :issue:`7610`.)
1651
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001652 The :func:`~zipfile.is_zipfile` function now
Benjamin Petersond69fe2a2010-02-03 02:59:43 +00001653 accepts a file object, in addition to the path names accepted in earlier
1654 versions. (Contributed by Gabriel Genellina; :issue:`4756`.)
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +00001655
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001656 The :meth:`~zipfile.ZipFile.writestr` method now has an optional *compress_type* parameter
Benjamin Peterson9895f912010-03-21 22:05:32 +00001657 that lets you override the default compression method specified in the
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001658 :class:`~zipfile.ZipFile` constructor. (Contributed by Ronald Oussoren;
Benjamin Peterson9895f912010-03-21 22:05:32 +00001659 :issue:`6003`.)
1660
Benjamin Peterson9895f912010-03-21 22:05:32 +00001661
Benjamin Petersonf10a79a2008-10-11 00:49:57 +00001662.. ======================================================================
1663.. whole new modules get described in subsections here
1664
Tarek Ziadéba0eacf2010-02-02 23:43:21 +00001665
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001666.. _importlib-section:
1667
1668New module: importlib
1669------------------------------
1670
1671Python 3.1 includes the :mod:`importlib` package, a re-implementation
1672of the logic underlying Python's :keyword:`import` statement.
1673:mod:`importlib` is useful for implementors of Python interpreters and
1674to users who wish to write new importers that can participate in the
1675import process. Python 2.7 doesn't contain the complete
1676:mod:`importlib` package, but instead has a tiny subset that contains
1677a single function, :func:`~importlib.import_module`.
1678
1679``import_module(name, package=None)`` imports a module. *name* is
1680a string containing the module or package's name. It's possible to do
1681relative imports by providing a string that begins with a ``.``
1682character, such as ``..utils.errors``. For relative imports, the
1683*package* argument must be provided and is the name of the package that
1684will be used as the anchor for
1685the relative import. :func:`~importlib.import_module` both inserts the imported
1686module into ``sys.modules`` and returns the module object.
1687
1688Here are some examples::
1689
1690 >>> from importlib import import_module
1691 >>> anydbm = import_module('anydbm') # Standard absolute import
1692 >>> anydbm
1693 <module 'anydbm' from '/p/python/Lib/anydbm.py'>
1694 >>> # Relative import
1695 >>> file_util = import_module('..file_util', 'distutils.command')
1696 >>> file_util
1697 <module 'distutils.file_util' from '/python/Lib/distutils/file_util.pyc'>
1698
1699:mod:`importlib` was implemented by Brett Cannon and introduced in
1700Python 3.1.
1701
1702
1703New module: sysconfig
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001704---------------------------------
1705
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001706The :mod:`sysconfig` module has been pulled out of the Distutils
1707package, becoming a new top-level module in its own right.
1708:mod:`sysconfig` provides functions for getting information about
1709Python's build process: compiler switches, installation paths, the
1710platform name, and whether Python is running from its source
1711directory.
1712
1713Some of the functions in the module are:
1714
1715* :func:`~sysconfig.get_config_var` returns variables from Python's
1716 Makefile and the :file:`pyconfig.h` file.
1717* :func:`~sysconfig.get_config_vars` returns a dictionary containing
1718 all of the configuration variables.
1719* :func:`~sysconfig.getpath` returns the configured path for
1720 a particular type of module: the standard library,
1721 site-specific modules, platform-specific modules, etc.
1722* :func:`~sysconfig.is_python_build` returns true if you're running a
1723 binary from a Python source tree, and false otherwise.
1724
1725Consult the :mod:`sysconfig` documentation for more details and for
1726a complete list of functions.
1727
1728The Distutils package and :mod:`sysconfig` are now maintained by Tarek
1729Ziadé, who has also started a Distutils2 package (source repository at
1730http://hg.python.org/distutils2/) for developing a next-generation
1731version of Distutils.
1732
1733
1734ttk: Themed Widgets for Tk
1735--------------------------
1736
1737Tcl/Tk 8.5 includes a set of themed widgets that re-implement basic Tk
1738widgets but have a more customizable appearance and can therefore more
1739closely resemble the native platform's widgets. This widget
1740set was originally called Tile, but was renamed to Ttk (for "themed Tk")
1741on being added to Tcl/Tck release 8.5.
1742
1743To learn more, read the :mod:`ttk` module documentation. You may also
1744wish to read the Tcl/Tk manual page describing the
1745Ttk theme engine, available at
1746http://www.tcl.tk/man/tcl8.5/TkCmd/ttk_intro.htm. Some
1747screenshots of the Python/Ttk code in use are at
1748http://code.google.com/p/python-ttk/wiki/Screenshots.
1749
1750The :mod:`ttk` module was written by Guilherme Polo and added in
1751:issue:`2983`. An alternate version called ``Tile.py``, written by
1752Martin Franklin and maintained by Kevin Walzer, was proposed for
1753inclusion in :issue:`2618`, but the authors argued that Guilherme
1754Polo's work was more comprehensive.
1755
1756
1757.. _unittest-section:
1758
1759Updated module: unittest
1760---------------------------------
1761
1762The :mod:`unittest` module was greatly enhanced; many
1763new features were added. Most of these features were implemented
1764by Michael Foord, unless otherwise noted. The enhanced version of
1765the module is downloadable separately for use with Python versions 2.4 to 2.6,
1766packaged as the :mod:`unittest2` package, from
1767http://pypi.python.org/pypi/unittest2.
1768
1769When used from the command line, the module can automatically discover
1770tests. It's not as fancy as `py.test <http://pytest.org>`__ or
1771`nose <http://code.google.com/p/python-nose/>`__, but provides a simple way
1772to run tests kept within a set of package directories. For example,
1773the following command will search the :file:`test/` subdirectory for
1774any importable test files named ``test*.py``::
1775
1776 python -m unittest discover -s test
1777
1778Consult the :mod:`unittest` module documentation for more details.
1779(Developed in :issue:`6001`.)
1780
1781The :func:`main` function supports some other new options:
1782
1783* :option:`-b` or :option:`--buffer` will buffer the standard output
1784 and standard error streams during each test. If the test passes,
1785 any resulting output will be discarded; on failure, the buffered
1786 output will be displayed.
1787
1788* :option:`-c` or :option:`--catch` will cause the control-C interrupt
1789 to be handled more gracefully. Instead of interrupting the test
1790 process immediately, the currently running test will be completed
1791 and then the partial results up to the interruption will be reported.
1792 If you're impatient, a second press of control-C will cause an immediate
1793 interruption.
1794
1795 This control-C handler tries to avoid causing problems when the code
1796 being tested or the tests being run have defined a signal handler of
1797 their own, by noticing that a signal handler was already set and
1798 calling it. If this doesn't work for you, there's a
1799 :func:`removeHandler` decorator that can be used to mark tests that
1800 should have the control-C handling disabled.
1801
1802* :option:`-f` or :option:`--failfast` makes
1803 test execution stop immediately when a test fails instead of
1804 continuing to execute further tests. (Suggested by Cliff Dyer and
1805 implemented by Michael Foord; :issue:`8074`.)
1806
1807The progress messages now show 'x' for expected failures
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001808and 'u' for unexpected successes when run in verbose mode.
1809(Contributed by Benjamin Peterson.)
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001810
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001811Test cases can raise the :exc:`~unittest.SkipTest` exception to skip a
1812test (:issue:`1034053`).
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001813
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001814The error messages for :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertEqual`,
1815:meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertTrue`, and :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertFalse`
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001816failures now provide more information. If you set the
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001817:attr:`~unittest.TestCase.longMessage` attribute of your :class:`~unittest.TestCase` classes to
1818True, both the standard error message and any additional message you
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001819provide will be printed for failures. (Added by Michael Foord; :issue:`5663`.)
1820
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001821The :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertRaises` method now
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001822returns a context handler when called without providing a callable
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001823object to run. For example, you can write this::
1824
1825 with self.assertRaises(KeyError):
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001826 {}['foo']
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001827
1828(Implemented by Antoine Pitrou; :issue:`4444`.)
1829
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001830.. rev 78774
1831
1832Module- and class-level setup and teardown fixtures are now supported.
1833Modules can contain :func:`~unittest.setUpModule` and :func:`~unittest.tearDownModule`
1834functions. Classes can have :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.setUpClass` and
1835:meth:`~unittest.TestCase.tearDownClass` methods that must be defined as class methods
1836(using ``@classmethod`` or equivalent). These functions and
1837methods are invoked when the test runner switches to a test case in a
1838different module or class.
1839
1840The methods :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.addCleanup` and
1841:meth:`~unittest.TestCase.doCleanups` were added.
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001842:meth:`~unittest.TestCase.addCleanup` lets you add cleanup functions that
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001843will be called unconditionally (after :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.setUp` if
1844:meth:`~unittest.TestCase.setUp` fails, otherwise after :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.tearDown`). This allows
1845for much simpler resource allocation and deallocation during tests
1846(:issue:`5679`).
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001847
1848A number of new methods were added that provide more specialized
1849tests. Many of these methods were written by Google engineers
1850for use in their test suites; Gregory P. Smith, Michael Foord, and
1851GvR worked on merging them into Python's version of :mod:`unittest`.
1852
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001853* :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertIsNone` and :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertIsNotNone` take one
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001854 expression and verify that the result is or is not ``None``.
1855
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001856* :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertIs` and :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertIsNot`
1857 take two values and check whether the two values evaluate to the same object or not.
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001858 (Added by Michael Foord; :issue:`2578`.)
1859
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001860* :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertIsInstance` and
1861 :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertNotIsInstance` check whether
Benjamin Petersona28e7022010-01-09 18:53:06 +00001862 the resulting object is an instance of a particular class, or of
1863 one of a tuple of classes. (Added by Georg Brandl; :issue:`7031`.)
1864
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001865* :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertGreater`, :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertGreaterEqual`,
1866 :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertLess`, and :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertLessEqual` compare
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001867 two quantities.
1868
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001869* :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertMultiLineEqual` compares two strings, and if they're
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001870 not equal, displays a helpful comparison that highlights the
Benjamin Peterson9895f912010-03-21 22:05:32 +00001871 differences in the two strings. This comparison is now used by
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001872 default when Unicode strings are compared with :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertEqual`.
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001873
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001874* :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertRegexpMatches` and
1875 :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertNotRegexpMatches` checks whether the
1876 first argument is a string matching or not matching the regular
1877 expression provided as the second argument (:issue:`8038`).
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001878
1879* :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertRaisesRegexp` checks whether a particular exception
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001880 is raised, and then also checks that the string representation of
1881 the exception matches the provided regular expression.
1882
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001883* :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertIn` and :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertNotIn`
1884 tests whether *first* is or is not in *second*.
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001885
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001886* :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertItemsEqual` tests whether two provided sequences
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001887 contain the same elements.
1888
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001889* :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertSetEqual` compares whether two sets are equal, and
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001890 only reports the differences between the sets in case of error.
1891
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001892* Similarly, :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertListEqual` and :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertTupleEqual`
Benjamin Peterson9895f912010-03-21 22:05:32 +00001893 compare the specified types and explain any differences without necessarily
1894 printing their full values; these methods are now used by default
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001895 when comparing lists and tuples using :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertEqual`.
1896 More generally, :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertSequenceEqual` compares two sequences
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001897 and can optionally check whether both sequences are of a
1898 particular type.
1899
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001900* :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertDictEqual` compares two dictionaries and reports the
Benjamin Peterson9895f912010-03-21 22:05:32 +00001901 differences; it's now used by default when you compare two dictionaries
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001902 using :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertEqual`. :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertDictContainsSubset` checks whether
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001903 all of the key/value pairs in *first* are found in *second*.
1904
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001905* :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertAlmostEqual` and :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertNotAlmostEqual` test
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001906 whether *first* and *second* are approximately equal. This method
1907 can either round their difference to an optionally-specified number
1908 of *places* (the default is 7) and compare it to zero, or require
1909 the difference to be smaller than a supplied *delta* value.
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001910
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001911* :meth:`~unittest.TestLoader.loadTestsFromName` properly honors the
1912 :attr:`~unittest.TestLoader.suiteClass` attribute of
1913 the :class:`~unittest.TestLoader`. (Fixed by Mark Roddy; :issue:`6866`.)
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001914
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001915* A new hook lets you extend the :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.assertEqual` method to handle
1916 new data types. The :meth:`~unittest.TestCase.addTypeEqualityFunc` method takes a type
1917 object and a function. The function will be used when both of the
1918 objects being compared are of the specified type. This function
1919 should compare the two objects and raise an exception if they don't
1920 match; it's a good idea for the function to provide additional
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001921 information about why the two objects aren't matching, much as the new
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001922 sequence comparison methods do.
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001923
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001924:func:`unittest.main` now takes an optional ``exit`` argument. If
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001925False, :func:`~unittest.main` doesn't call :func:`sys.exit`, allowing
1926:func:`main` to be used from the interactive interpreter.
1927(Contributed by J. Pablo Fernández; :issue:`3379`.)
Ezio Melotti6c96ffe2010-04-07 04:27:14 +00001928
1929:class:`~unittest.TestResult` has new :meth:`~unittest.TestResult.startTestRun` and
1930:meth:`~unittest.TestResult.stopTestRun` methods that are called immediately before
1931and after a test run. (Contributed by Robert Collins; :issue:`5728`.)
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001932
1933With all these changes, the :file:`unittest.py` was becoming awkwardly
1934large, so the module was turned into a package and the code split into
1935several files (by Benjamin Peterson). This doesn't affect how the
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001936module is imported or used.
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001937
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001938.. seealso::
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001939
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001940 http://www.voidspace.org.uk/python/articles/unittest2.shtml
1941 Describes the new features, how to use them, and the
1942 rationale for various design decisions. (By Michael Foord.)
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00001943
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001944.. _elementtree-section:
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +00001945
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001946Updated module: ElementTree 1.3
1947---------------------------------
Benjamin Petersonf47ed4a2009-04-11 20:45:40 +00001948
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001949The version of the ElementTree library included with Python was updated to
1950version 1.3. Some of the new features are:
Benjamin Petersonf47ed4a2009-04-11 20:45:40 +00001951
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001952* The various parsing functions now take a *parser* keyword argument
1953 giving an :class:`XMLParser` instance that will
1954 be used. This makes it possible to override the file's internal encoding::
Benjamin Petersonf47ed4a2009-04-11 20:45:40 +00001955
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001956 p = ET.XMLParser(encoding='utf-8')
1957 t = ET.XML("""<root/>""", parser=p)
Benjamin Petersonf47ed4a2009-04-11 20:45:40 +00001958
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001959 Errors in parsing XML now raise a :exc:`ParseError` exception, whose
1960 instances have a :attr:`position` attribute
1961 containing a (*line*, *column*) tuple giving the location of the problem.
Benjamin Petersonf47ed4a2009-04-11 20:45:40 +00001962
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001963* ElementTree's code for converting trees to a string has been
1964 significantly reworked, making it roughly twice as fast in many
1965 cases. The :class:`ElementTree` :meth:`write` and :class:`Element`
1966 :meth:`write` methods now have a *method* parameter that can be
1967 "xml" (the default), "html", or "text". HTML mode will output empty
1968 elements as ``<empty></empty>`` instead of ``<empty/>``, and text
1969 mode will skip over elements and only output the text chunks. If
1970 you set the :attr:`tag` attribute of an element to ``None`` but
1971 leave its children in place, the element will be omitted when the
1972 tree is written out, so you don't need to do more extensive rearrangement
1973 to remove a single element.
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +00001974
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001975 Namespace handling has also been improved. All ``xmlns:<whatever>``
1976 declarations are now output on the root element, not scattered throughout
1977 the resulting XML. You can set the default namespace for a tree
1978 by setting the :attr:`default_namespace` attribute and can
1979 register new prefixes with :meth:`register_namespace`. In XML mode,
1980 you can use the true/false *xml_declaration* parameter to suppress the
1981 XML declaration.
Benjamin Peterson5c6d7872009-02-06 02:40:07 +00001982
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001983* New :class:`Element` method: :meth:`extend` appends the items from a
1984 sequence to the element's children. Elements themselves behave like
1985 sequences, so it's easy to move children from one element to
1986 another::
Benjamin Peterson5c6d7872009-02-06 02:40:07 +00001987
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001988 from xml.etree import ElementTree as ET
Benjamin Peterson5c6d7872009-02-06 02:40:07 +00001989
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001990 t = ET.XML("""<list>
1991 <item>1</item> <item>2</item> <item>3</item>
1992 </list>""")
1993 new = ET.XML('<root/>')
1994 new.extend(t)
Benjamin Peterson5c6d7872009-02-06 02:40:07 +00001995
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001996 # Outputs <root><item>1</item>...</root>
1997 print ET.tostring(new)
Georg Brandl4d131ee2009-11-18 18:53:14 +00001998
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001999* New :class:`Element` method: :meth:`iter` yields the children of the
2000 element as a generator. It's also possible to write ``for child in
2001 elem:`` to loop over an element's children. The existing method
2002 :meth:`getiterator` is now deprecated, as is :meth:`getchildren`
2003 which constructs and returns a list of children.
Georg Brandl4d131ee2009-11-18 18:53:14 +00002004
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00002005* New :class:`Element` method: :meth:`itertext` yields all chunks of
2006 text that are descendants of the element. For example::
2007
2008 t = ET.XML("""<list>
2009 <item>1</item> <item>2</item> <item>3</item>
2010 </list>""")
2011
2012 # Outputs ['\n ', '1', ' ', '2', ' ', '3', '\n']
2013 print list(t.itertext())
2014
2015* Deprecated: using an element as a Boolean (i.e., ``if elem:``) would
2016 return true if the element had any children, or false if there were
2017 no children. This behaviour is confusing -- ``None`` is false, but
2018 so is a childless element? -- so it will now trigger a
2019 :exc:`FutureWarning`. In your code, you should be explicit: write
2020 ``len(elem) != 0`` if you're interested in the number of children,
2021 or ``elem is not None``.
2022
2023Fredrik Lundh develops ElementTree and produced the 1.3 version;
2024you can read his article describing 1.3 at
2025http://effbot.org/zone/elementtree-13-intro.htm.
2026Florent Xicluna updated the version included with
2027Python, after discussions on python-dev and in :issue:`6472`.)
Georg Brandl4d131ee2009-11-18 18:53:14 +00002028
Benjamin Petersonf10a79a2008-10-11 00:49:57 +00002029.. ======================================================================
2030
2031
2032Build and C API Changes
2033=======================
2034
2035Changes to Python's build process and to the C API include:
2036
Ezio Melotti11d22dc2010-04-20 09:55:05 +00002037* The latest release of the GNU Debugger, GDB 7, can be `scripted
2038 using Python
2039 <http://sourceware.org/gdb/current/onlinedocs/gdb/Python.html>`__.
2040 When you begin debugging an executable program P, GDB will look for
2041 a file named ``P-gdb.py`` and automatically read it. Dave Malcolm
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00002042 contributed a :file:`python-gdb.py` that adds a number of
2043 commands useful when debugging Python itself. For example,
2044 ``py-up`` and ``py-down`` go up or down one Python stack frame,
Ezio Melotti11d22dc2010-04-20 09:55:05 +00002045 which usually corresponds to several C stack frames. ``py-print``
2046 prints the value of a Python variable, and ``py-bt`` prints the
2047 Python stack trace. (Added as a result of :issue:`8032`.)
2048
Georg Brandl1f01deb2009-01-03 22:47:39 +00002049* If you use the :file:`.gdbinit` file provided with Python,
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00002050 the "pyo" macro in the 2.7 version now works correctly when the thread being
2051 debugged doesn't hold the GIL; the macro now acquires it before printing.
Benjamin Peterson1010bf32009-01-30 04:00:29 +00002052 (Contributed by Victor Stinner; :issue:`3632`.)
2053
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +00002054* :cfunc:`Py_AddPendingCall` is now thread-safe, letting any
Benjamin Peterson1010bf32009-01-30 04:00:29 +00002055 worker thread submit notifications to the main Python thread. This
2056 is particularly useful for asynchronous IO operations.
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00002057 (Contributed by Kristján Valur Jónsson; :issue:`4293`.)
Benjamin Peterson1010bf32009-01-30 04:00:29 +00002058
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00002059* New function: :cfunc:`PyCode_NewEmpty` creates an empty code object;
2060 only the filename, function name, and first line number are required.
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00002061 This is useful for extension modules that are attempting to
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00002062 construct a more useful traceback stack. Previously such
2063 extensions needed to call :cfunc:`PyCode_New`, which had many
2064 more arguments. (Added by Jeffrey Yasskin.)
2065
Benjamin Peterson9eea4802009-12-31 03:31:15 +00002066* New function: :cfunc:`PyErr_NewExceptionWithDoc` creates a new
2067 exception class, just as the existing :cfunc:`PyErr_NewException` does,
2068 but takes an extra ``char *`` argument containing the docstring for the
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00002069 new exception class. (Added by 'lekma' on the Python bug tracker;
Benjamin Peterson9eea4802009-12-31 03:31:15 +00002070 :issue:`7033`.)
2071
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00002072* New function: :cfunc:`PyFrame_GetLineNumber` takes a frame object
2073 and returns the line number that the frame is currently executing.
2074 Previously code would need to get the index of the bytecode
2075 instruction currently executing, and then look up the line number
2076 corresponding to that address. (Added by Jeffrey Yasskin.)
2077
Benjamin Petersond69fe2a2010-02-03 02:59:43 +00002078* New functions: :cfunc:`PyLong_AsLongAndOverflow` and
2079 :cfunc:`PyLong_AsLongLongAndOverflow` approximates a Python long
2080 integer as a C :ctype:`long` or :ctype:`long long`.
2081 If the number is too large to fit into
2082 the output type, an *overflow* flag is set and returned to the caller.
2083 (Contributed by Case Van Horsen; :issue:`7528` and :issue:`7767`.)
Benjamin Peterson9eea4802009-12-31 03:31:15 +00002084
Benjamin Petersona28e7022010-01-09 18:53:06 +00002085* New function: stemming from the rewrite of string-to-float conversion,
2086 a new :cfunc:`PyOS_string_to_double` function was added. The old
2087 :cfunc:`PyOS_ascii_strtod` and :cfunc:`PyOS_ascii_atof` functions
2088 are now deprecated.
2089
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00002090* New function: :cfunc:`PySys_SetArgvEx` sets the value of
2091 ``sys.argv`` and can optionally update ``sys.path`` to include the
2092 directory containing the script named by ``sys.argv[0]`` depending
2093 on the value of an *updatepath* parameter.
2094
2095 This function was added to close a security hole for applications
2096 that embed Python. The old function, :cfunc:`PySys_SetArgv`, would
2097 always update ``sys.path``, and sometimes it would add the current
2098 directory. This meant that, if you ran an application embedding
2099 Python in a directory controlled by someone else, attackers could
2100 put a Trojan-horse module in the directory (say, a file named
2101 :file:`os.py`) that your application would then import and run.
2102
2103 If you maintain a C/C++ application that embeds Python, check
2104 whether you're calling :cfunc:`PySys_SetArgv` and carefully consider
2105 whether the application should be using :cfunc:`PySys_SetArgvEx`
2106 with *updatepath* set to false.
2107
2108 Security issue reported as `CVE-2008-5983
2109 <http://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2008-5983>`_;
2110 discussed in :issue:`5753`, and fixed by Antoine Pitrou.
2111
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00002112* New macros: the Python header files now define the following macros:
2113 :cmacro:`Py_ISALNUM`,
2114 :cmacro:`Py_ISALPHA`,
2115 :cmacro:`Py_ISDIGIT`,
2116 :cmacro:`Py_ISLOWER`,
2117 :cmacro:`Py_ISSPACE`,
2118 :cmacro:`Py_ISUPPER`,
2119 :cmacro:`Py_ISXDIGIT`,
2120 and :cmacro:`Py_TOLOWER`, :cmacro:`Py_TOUPPER`.
2121 All of these functions are analogous to the C
2122 standard macros for classifying characters, but ignore the current
2123 locale setting, because in
2124 several places Python needs to analyze characters in a
2125 locale-independent way. (Added by Eric Smith;
2126 :issue:`5793`.)
2127
2128 .. XXX these macros don't seem to be described in the c-api docs.
2129
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00002130* Removed function: :cmacro:`PyEval_CallObject` is now only available
2131 as a macro. A function version was being kept around to preserve
2132 ABI linking compatibility, but that was in 1997; it can certainly be
2133 deleted by now. (Removed by Antoine Pitrou; :issue:`8276`.)
2134
Benjamin Peterson9eea4802009-12-31 03:31:15 +00002135* New format codes: the :cfunc:`PyFormat_FromString`,
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00002136 :cfunc:`PyFormat_FromStringV`, and :cfunc:`PyErr_Format` functions now
2137 accept ``%lld`` and ``%llu`` format codes for displaying
Benjamin Peterson9eea4802009-12-31 03:31:15 +00002138 C's :ctype:`long long` types.
2139 (Contributed by Mark Dickinson; :issue:`7228`.)
2140
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00002141* The complicated interaction between threads and process forking has
2142 been changed. Previously, the child process created by
2143 :func:`os.fork` might fail because the child is created with only a
2144 single thread running, the thread performing the :func:`os.fork`.
2145 If other threads were holding a lock, such as Python's import lock,
2146 when the fork was performed, the lock would still be marked as
2147 "held" in the new process. But in the child process nothing would
2148 ever release the lock, since the other threads weren't replicated,
2149 and the child process would no longer be able to perform imports.
2150
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00002151 Python 2.7 acquires the import lock before performing an
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00002152 :func:`os.fork`, and will also clean up any locks created using the
2153 :mod:`threading` module. C extension modules that have internal
2154 locks, or that call :cfunc:`fork()` themselves, will not benefit
2155 from this clean-up.
2156
2157 (Fixed by Thomas Wouters; :issue:`1590864`.)
2158
Benjamin Petersona28e7022010-01-09 18:53:06 +00002159* The :cfunc:`Py_Finalize` function now calls the internal
2160 :func:`threading._shutdown` function; this prevents some exceptions from
2161 being raised when an interpreter shuts down.
2162 (Patch by Adam Olsen; :issue:`1722344`.)
2163
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00002164* When using the :ctype:`PyMemberDef` structure to define attributes
2165 of a type, Python will no longer let you try to delete or set a
2166 :const:`T_STRING_INPLACE` attribute.
2167
2168 .. rev 79644
2169
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +00002170* Global symbols defined by the :mod:`ctypes` module are now prefixed
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00002171 with ``Py``, or with ``_ctypes``. (Implemented by Thomas
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +00002172 Heller; :issue:`3102`.)
2173
Benjamin Petersona28e7022010-01-09 18:53:06 +00002174* New configure option: the :option:`--with-system-expat` switch allows
2175 building the :mod:`pyexpat` module to use the system Expat library.
2176 (Contributed by Arfrever Frehtes Taifersar Arahesis; :issue:`7609`.)
2177
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00002178* New configure option: the
Benjamin Petersona28e7022010-01-09 18:53:06 +00002179 :option:`--with-valgrind` option will now disable the pymalloc
Ezio Melotti11d22dc2010-04-20 09:55:05 +00002180 allocator, which is difficult for the Valgrind memory-error detector
2181 to analyze correctly.
Benjamin Petersona28e7022010-01-09 18:53:06 +00002182 Valgrind will therefore be better at detecting memory leaks and
2183 overruns. (Contributed by James Henstridge; :issue:`2422`.)
2184
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00002185* New configure option: you can now supply an empty string to
2186 :option:`--with-dbmliborder=` in order to disable all of the various
Benjamin Petersona28e7022010-01-09 18:53:06 +00002187 DBM modules. (Added by Arfrever Frehtes Taifersar Arahesis;
2188 :issue:`6491`.)
2189
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +00002190* The :program:`configure` script now checks for floating-point rounding bugs
2191 on certain 32-bit Intel chips and defines a :cmacro:`X87_DOUBLE_ROUNDING`
2192 preprocessor definition. No code currently uses this definition,
2193 but it's available if anyone wishes to use it.
2194 (Added by Mark Dickinson; :issue:`2937`.)
Benjamin Petersonf10a79a2008-10-11 00:49:57 +00002195
Ezio Melotti11d22dc2010-04-20 09:55:05 +00002196 :program:`configure` also now sets a :envvar:`LDCXXSHARED` Makefile
2197 variable for supporting C++ linking. (Contributed by Arfrever
2198 Frehtes Taifersar Arahesis; :issue:`1222585`.)
2199
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00002200* The build process now creates the necessary files for pkg-config
2201 support. (Contributed by Clinton Roy; :issue:`3585`.)
2202
2203* The build process now supports Subversion 1.7. (Contributed by
2204 Arfrever Frehtes Taifersar Arahesis; :issue:`6094`.)
2205
Benjamin Peterson9eea4802009-12-31 03:31:15 +00002206
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00002207.. _whatsnew27-capsules:
2208
2209Capsules
2210-------------------
2211
2212Python 3.1 adds a new C datatype, :ctype:`PyCapsule`, for providing a
2213C API to an extension module. A capsule is essentially the holder of
2214a C ``void *`` pointer, and is made available as a module attribute; for
2215example, the :mod:`socket` module's API is exposed as ``socket.CAPI``,
2216and :mod:`unicodedata` exposes ``ucnhash_CAPI``. Other extensions
2217can import the module, access its dictionary to get the capsule
2218object, and then get the ``void *`` pointer, which will usually point
2219to an array of pointers to the module's various API functions.
2220
2221There is an existing data type already used for this,
2222:ctype:`PyCObject`, but it doesn't provide type safety. Evil code
2223written in pure Python could cause a segmentation fault by taking a
2224:ctype:`PyCObject` from module A and somehow substituting it for the
2225:ctype:`PyCObject` in module B. Capsules know their own name,
2226and getting the pointer requires providing the name::
2227
2228 void *vtable;
2229
2230 if (!PyCapsule_IsValid(capsule, "mymodule.CAPI") {
2231 PyErr_SetString(PyExc_ValueError, "argument type invalid");
2232 return NULL;
2233 }
2234
2235 vtable = PyCapsule_GetPointer(capsule, "mymodule.CAPI");
2236
2237You are assured that ``vtable`` points to whatever you're expecting.
2238If a different capsule was passed in, :cfunc:`PyCapsule_IsValid` would
2239detect the mismatched name and return false. Refer to
2240:ref:`using-capsules` for more information on using these objects.
2241
2242Python 2.7 now uses capsules internally to provide various
2243extension-module APIs, but the :cfunc:`PyCObject_AsVoidPtr` was
2244modified to handle capsules, preserving compile-time compatibility
2245with the :ctype:`CObject` interface. Use of
2246:cfunc:`PyCObject_AsVoidPtr` will signal a
2247:exc:`PendingDeprecationWarning`, which is silent by default.
2248
2249Implemented in Python 3.1 and backported to 2.7 by Larry Hastings;
2250discussed in :issue:`5630`.
2251
2252
Benjamin Petersonf10a79a2008-10-11 00:49:57 +00002253.. ======================================================================
2254
2255Port-Specific Changes: Windows
2256-----------------------------------
2257
Georg Brandl1f01deb2009-01-03 22:47:39 +00002258* The :mod:`msvcrt` module now contains some constants from
2259 the :file:`crtassem.h` header file:
2260 :data:`CRT_ASSEMBLY_VERSION`,
2261 :data:`VC_ASSEMBLY_PUBLICKEYTOKEN`,
2262 and :data:`LIBRARIES_ASSEMBLY_NAME_PREFIX`.
Benjamin Peterson1010bf32009-01-30 04:00:29 +00002263 (Contributed by David Cournapeau; :issue:`4365`.)
2264
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00002265* The :mod:`_winreg` module for accessing the registry now implements
2266 the :func:`CreateKeyEx` and :func:`DeleteKeyEx` functions, extended
2267 versions of previously-supported functions that take several extra
2268 arguments. The :func:`DisableReflectionKey`,
2269 :func:`EnableReflectionKey`, and :func:`QueryReflectionKey` were also
2270 tested and documented.
2271 (Implemented by Brian Curtin: :issue:`7347`.)
2272
Benjamin Peterson1010bf32009-01-30 04:00:29 +00002273* The new :cfunc:`_beginthreadex` API is used to start threads, and
2274 the native thread-local storage functions are now used.
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00002275 (Contributed by Kristján Valur Jónsson; :issue:`3582`.)
Benjamin Petersonf10a79a2008-10-11 00:49:57 +00002276
Ezio Melotti11d22dc2010-04-20 09:55:05 +00002277* The :func:`os.kill` function now works on Windows. The signal value
2278 can be the constants :const:`CTRL_C_EVENT`,
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00002279 :const:`CTRL_BREAK_EVENT`, or any integer. The first two constants
2280 will send Control-C and Control-Break keystroke events to
2281 subprocesses; any other value will use the :cfunc:`TerminateProcess`
2282 API. (Contributed by Miki Tebeka; :issue:`1220212`.)
Ezio Melotti11d22dc2010-04-20 09:55:05 +00002283
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00002284* The :func:`os.listdir` function now correctly fails
2285 for an empty path. (Fixed by Hirokazu Yamamoto; :issue:`5913`.)
2286
Benjamin Peterson9eea4802009-12-31 03:31:15 +00002287* The :mod:`mimelib` module will now read the MIME database from
2288 the Windows registry when initializing.
2289 (Patch by Gabriel Genellina; :issue:`4969`.)
2290
Benjamin Petersonf10a79a2008-10-11 00:49:57 +00002291.. ======================================================================
2292
2293Port-Specific Changes: Mac OS X
2294-----------------------------------
2295
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00002296* The path ``/Library/Python/2.7/site-packages`` is now appended to
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +00002297 ``sys.path``, in order to share added packages between the system
2298 installation and a user-installed copy of the same version.
2299 (Changed by Ronald Oussoren; :issue:`4865`.)
2300
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00002301Port-Specific Changes: FreeBSD
2302-----------------------------------
2303
2304* FreeBSD 7.1's :const:`SO_SETFIB` constant, used with
2305 :func:`~socket.getsockopt`/:func:`~socket.setsockopt` to select an
2306 alternate routing table, is now available in the :mod:`socket`
2307 module. (Added by Kyle VanderBeek; :issue:`8235`.)
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +00002308
2309Other Changes and Fixes
2310=======================
2311
Benjamin Peterson9895f912010-03-21 22:05:32 +00002312* Two benchmark scripts, :file:`iobench` and :file:`ccbench`, were
2313 added to the :file:`Tools` directory. :file:`iobench` measures the
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00002314 speed of the built-in file I/O objects returned by :func:`open`
Benjamin Peterson9895f912010-03-21 22:05:32 +00002315 while performing various operations, and :file:`ccbench` is a
2316 concurrency benchmark that tries to measure computing throughput,
2317 thread switching latency, and IO processing bandwidth when
2318 performing several tasks using a varying number of threads.
2319
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00002320* The :file:`Tools/i18n/msgfmt.py` script now understands plural
2321 forms in :file:`.po` files. (Fixed by Martin von Löwis;
2322 :issue:`5464`.)
2323
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +00002324* When importing a module from a :file:`.pyc` or :file:`.pyo` file
2325 with an existing :file:`.py` counterpart, the :attr:`co_filename`
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +00002326 attributes of the resulting code objects are overwritten when the
2327 original filename is obsolete. This can happen if the file has been
2328 renamed, moved, or is accessed through different paths. (Patch by
2329 Ziga Seilnacht and Jean-Paul Calderone; :issue:`1180193`.)
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +00002330
2331* The :file:`regrtest.py` script now takes a :option:`--randseed=`
2332 switch that takes an integer that will be used as the random seed
2333 for the :option:`-r` option that executes tests in random order.
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00002334 The :option:`-r` option also reports the seed that was used
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +00002335 (Added by Collin Winter.)
2336
Benjamin Petersona28e7022010-01-09 18:53:06 +00002337* Another :file:`regrtest.py` switch is :option:`-j`, which
2338 takes an integer specifying how many tests run in parallel. This
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00002339 allows reducing the total runtime on multi-core machines.
Antoine Pitrou88909542009-06-29 13:54:42 +00002340 This option is compatible with several other options, including the
2341 :option:`-R` switch which is known to produce long runtimes.
Benjamin Petersona28e7022010-01-09 18:53:06 +00002342 (Added by Antoine Pitrou, :issue:`6152`.) This can also be used
2343 with a new :option:`-F` switch that runs selected tests in a loop
2344 until they fail. (Added by Antoine Pitrou; :issue:`7312`.)
Benjamin Petersonf10a79a2008-10-11 00:49:57 +00002345
Ezio Melotti11d22dc2010-04-20 09:55:05 +00002346* When executed as a script, the :file:`py_compile.py` module now
2347 accepts ``'-'`` as an argument, which will read standard input for
2348 the list of filenames to be compiled. (Contributed by Piotr
2349 Ożarowski; :issue:`8233`.)
2350
Benjamin Petersonf10a79a2008-10-11 00:49:57 +00002351.. ======================================================================
2352
2353Porting to Python 2.7
2354=====================
2355
2356This section lists previously described changes and other bugfixes
2357that may require changes to your code:
2358
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00002359* The :func:`range` function processes its arguments more
2360 consistently; it will now call :meth:`__int__` on non-float,
2361 non-integer arguments that are supplied to it. (Fixed by Alexander
2362 Belopolsky; :issue:`1533`.)
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00002363
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00002364* The string :meth:`format` method changed the default precision used
2365 for floating-point and complex numbers from 6 decimal
Benjamin Petersonf6489f92009-11-25 17:46:26 +00002366 places to 12, which matches the precision used by :func:`str`.
2367 (Changed by Eric Smith; :issue:`5920`.)
2368
Benjamin Peterson87c8d872009-06-11 22:54:11 +00002369* Because of an optimization for the :keyword:`with` statement, the special
2370 methods :meth:`__enter__` and :meth:`__exit__` must belong to the object's
2371 type, and cannot be directly attached to the object's instance. This
2372 affects new-style classes (derived from :class:`object`) and C extension
2373 types. (:issue:`6101`.)
Benjamin Petersonf10a79a2008-10-11 00:49:57 +00002374
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00002375* Due to a bug in Python 2.6, the *exc_value* parameter to
2376 :meth:`__exit__` methods was often the string representation of the
2377 exception, not an instance. This was fixed in 2.7, so *exc_value*
2378 will be an instance as expected. (Fixed by Florent Xicluna;
2379 :issue:`7853`.)
2380
2381* When a restricted set of attributes were set using ``__slots__``,
2382 deleting an unset attribute would not raise :exc:`AttributeError`
2383 as you would expect. Fixed by Benjamin Peterson; :issue:`7604`.)
Benjamin Peterson9eea4802009-12-31 03:31:15 +00002384
Benjamin Peterson9895f912010-03-21 22:05:32 +00002385In the standard library:
2386
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00002387* Operations with :class:`datetime` instances that resulted in a year
2388 falling outside the supported range didn't always raise
2389 :exc:`OverflowError`. Such errors are now checked more carefully
2390 and will now raise the exception. (Reported by Mark Leander, patch
2391 by Anand B. Pillai and Alexander Belopolsky; :issue:`7150`.)
2392
2393* When using :class:`Decimal` instances with a string's
2394 :meth:`format` method, the default alignment was previously
2395 left-alignment. This has been changed to right-alignment, which might
2396 change the output of your programs.
2397 (Changed by Mark Dickinson; :issue:`6857`.)
2398
2399 Comparisons involving a signaling NaN value (or ``sNAN``) now signal
2400 :const:`InvalidOperation` instead of silently returning a true or
2401 false value depending on the comparison operator. Quiet NaN values
2402 (or ``NaN``) are now hashable. (Fixed by Mark Dickinson;
2403 :issue:`7279`.)
2404
Benjamin Peterson9895f912010-03-21 22:05:32 +00002405* The ElementTree library, :mod:`xml.etree`, no longer escapes
2406 ampersands and angle brackets when outputting an XML processing
2407 instruction (which looks like `<?xml-stylesheet href="#style1"?>`)
2408 or comment (which looks like `<!-- comment -->`).
2409 (Patch by Neil Muller; :issue:`2746`.)
2410
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00002411* The :meth:`readline` method of :class:`StringIO` objects now does
2412 nothing when a negative length is requested, as other file-like
2413 objects do. (:issue:`7348`).
2414
2415* The :mod:`syslog` module will now use the value of ``sys.argv[0]`` as the
2416 identifier instead of the previous default value of ``'python'``.
2417 (Changed by Sean Reifschneider; :issue:`8451`.)
2418
2419* The :mod:`tarfile` module's default error handling has changed, to
2420 no longer suppress fatal errors. The default error level was previously 0,
2421 which meant that errors would only result in a message being written to the
2422 debug log, but because the debug log is not activated by default,
2423 these errors go unnoticed. The default error level is now 1,
2424 which raises an exception if there's an error.
2425 (Changed by Lars Gustäbel; :issue:`7357`.)
2426
2427* The :mod:`urlparse` module's :func:`~urlparse.urlsplit` now handles
2428 unknown URL schemes in a fashion compliant with :rfc:`3986`: if the
2429 URL is of the form ``"<something>://..."``, the text before the
2430 ``://`` is treated as the scheme, even if it's a made-up scheme that
2431 the module doesn't know about. This change may break code that
2432 worked around the old behaviour. For example, Python 2.6.4 or 2.5
2433 will return the following:
2434
2435 >>> import urlparse
2436 >>> urlparse.urlsplit('invented://host/filename?query')
2437 ('invented', '', '//host/filename?query', '', '')
2438
2439 Python 2.7 (and Python 2.6.5) will return:
2440
2441 >>> import urlparse
2442 >>> urlparse.urlsplit('invented://host/filename?query')
2443 ('invented', 'host', '/filename?query', '', '')
2444
2445 (Python 2.7 actually produces slightly different output, since it
2446 returns a named tuple instead of a standard tuple.)
2447
Benjamin Petersona28e7022010-01-09 18:53:06 +00002448For C extensions:
2449
2450* C extensions that use integer format codes with the ``PyArg_Parse*``
2451 family of functions will now raise a :exc:`TypeError` exception
2452 instead of triggering a :exc:`DeprecationWarning` (:issue:`5080`).
2453
2454* Use the new :cfunc:`PyOS_string_to_double` function instead of the old
2455 :cfunc:`PyOS_ascii_strtod` and :cfunc:`PyOS_ascii_atof` functions,
2456 which are now deprecated.
2457
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00002458For applications that embed Python:
2459
2460* The :cfunc:`PySys_SetArgvEx` function was added, letting
2461 applications close a security hole when the existing
2462 :cfunc:`PySys_SetArgv` function was used. Check whether you're
2463 calling :cfunc:`PySys_SetArgv` and carefully consider whether the
2464 application should be using :cfunc:`PySys_SetArgvEx` with
2465 *updatepath* set to false.
Benjamin Petersona28e7022010-01-09 18:53:06 +00002466
Benjamin Petersonf10a79a2008-10-11 00:49:57 +00002467.. ======================================================================
2468
2469
2470.. _acks27:
2471
2472Acknowledgements
2473================
2474
2475The author would like to thank the following people for offering
2476suggestions, corrections and assistance with various drafts of this
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00002477article: Nick Coghlan, Philip Jenvey, Ryan Lovett, R. David Murray,
2478Hugh Secker-Walker.
Benjamin Petersonf10a79a2008-10-11 00:49:57 +00002479