We previously used `AC_RUN_IF_ELSE` with a short test program to detect
if `-latomic` is needed, but that requires choosing a specific default
value when cross-compiling because the test program is not run.
Some cross compilation targets like `wasm32-emscripten` do not support
`-latomic`, while other cross compilation targets, like
`arm-linux-gnueabi` require it.
Propagate fixes in Doc/library/idle.rst to help.html.
Change 'interruptable' to 'interruptible' in run.py.
The latter was reported by ember91 in PR 125473.
Users want to know when the current context switches to a different
context object. Right now this happens when and only when a context
is entered or exited, so the enter and exit events are synonymous with
"switched". However, if the changes proposed for gh-99633 are
implemented, the current context will also switch for reasons other
than context enter or exit. Since users actually care about context
switches and not enter or exit, replace the enter and exit events with
a single switched event.
The former exit event was emitted just before exiting the context.
The new switched event is emitted after the context is exited to match
the semantics users expect of an event with a past-tense name. If
users need the ability to clean up before the switch takes effect,
another event type can be added in the future. It is not added here
because YAGNI.
I skipped 0 in the enum as a matter of practice. Skipping 0 makes it
easier to troubleshoot when code forgets to set zeroed memory, and it
aligns with best practices for other tools (e.g.,
https://protobuf.dev/programming-guides/dos-donts/#unspecified-enum).
It is an alternate constructor which only accepts a single numeric argument.
Unlike to Decimal.from_float() it accepts also Decimal.
Unlike to the standard constructor, it does not accept strings and tuples.
It is an alternative constructor which only accepts a single numeric argument.
Unlike to Fraction.from_float() and Fraction.from_decimal() it accepts any
real numbers supported by the standard constructor (int, float, Decimal,
Rational numbers, objects with as_integer_ratio()).
Unlike to the standard constructor, it does not accept strings.
Lock `ZoneInfoType` to protect accesses to `ZONEINFO_STRONG_CACHE`.
Refactor the `tp_new` handler to use Argument Clinic so that we can just
use `@critical_section` annotations on the relevant functions.
Also use `PyDict_SetDefaultRef` instead of `PyDict_SetDefault` when
inserting into the `TIMEDELTA_CACHE`.
`PurePath.__init__()` incorrectly uses the `_raw_paths` of a given
`PurePath` object with a different flavour, even though the procedure to
join path segments can differ between flavours.
This change makes the `_raw_paths`-enabled deferred joining apply _only_
when the path flavours match.
Co-authored-by: Bénédikt Tran <10796600+picnixz@users.noreply.github.com>
In aeca373b3 (PR gh-12011, issue gh-71500), test_identify() was changed to expect different results on Darwin. Ned's fix was later adjusted by e52f9bee8. This workaround is only needed for some variants of Tk/Tcl on macOS, so we now allow both the workaround and the generic results for these tests.
Update comments about what running hash -r does
The old comment said "hash -r" forgets "past commands." However, the documentation for "hash" states that it forgets past locations. The old comment was, in my opinion, confusing. This is because it could be interpreted to mean it does something to the command history (HISTORY/HISTFILE etc) vs the cache of locations.
Currently, the "global interpreter lock" entry in the glossary mentions
that `-X gil 0` can be used to disable the GIL [1]. However, this is
invalid; the correct usage should be `-X gil=0`.
$ python -X gil 0 -c 'print("Hello, world")'
Fatal Python error: config_read_gil: PYTHON_GIL / -X gil must be "0" or "1"
Python runtime state: preinitialized
$ python -X gil=0 -c 'print("Hello, world")'
Hello, world
[1]: https://docs.python.org/3/using/cmdline.html#cmdoption-X
Signed-off-by: Ruoyu Zhong <zhongruoyu@outlook.com>
* Update sample code in asyncio-task.rst
This will change **coroutines** sample code in the **Awaitables** section and make the example clearer.
* Update Doc/library/asyncio-task.rst
Revert the added print
Co-authored-by: Carol Willing <carolcode@willingconsulting.com>
* Update Doc/library/asyncio-task.rst
Co-authored-by: Carol Willing <carolcode@willingconsulting.com>
---------
Co-authored-by: Carol Willing <carolcode@willingconsulting.com>
In the datastructures tutorial doc, some operations are described as
"equivalent to" others. This has led to some user-confusion -- at
least in the Discourse forums -- about cases in which the operations
differ.
This change doesn't systematically eliminate the word "equivalent"
from the tutorial. It just substitutes "similar to" in several cases
in which "equivalent to" could mislead users into expecting exact
equivalence.
In some locales (like French or Hebrew) the full or abbreviated names of
the default month and weekday used in __calc_date_time can be part of
other name or constant part of the %c format. The month name can also
match %m with constant suffix (like in Japanese). So the code failed to
correctly distinguish formats %a, %A, %b, %B and %m.
Cycle all month and all days of the week to find the variable part
and distinguish %a from %A and %b from %B or %m.
Fixed locales for the following languges:
Arabic, Bislama, Breton, Bodo, Kashubian, Chuvash, Estonian, French, Irish,
Ge'ez, Gurajati, Manx Gaelic, Hebrew, Hindi, Chhattisgarhi, Haitian Kreyol,
Japanese, Kannada, Korean, Marathi, Malay, Norwegian, Nynorsk, Punjabi,
Rajasthani, Tok Pisin, Yoruba, Yue Chinese, Yau/Nungon and Chinese.
Co-authored-by: Eli Bendersky <eliben@gmail.com>
This follows GNU gzip, which defaults to using 0 as the mtime
for compressing stdin, where no file mtime is involved.
This makes the output of gzip.compress() deterministic by default,
greatly helping reproducible builds.
Co-authored-by: Adam Turner <9087854+AA-Turner@users.noreply.github.com>