Commit Graph

17919 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jack Jansen 9f66b4af6a include Carbon/Carbon.h in stead of universal headers, if appropriate. 2001-05-19 12:32:39 +00:00
Jack Jansen 8bb1dc1f8d Merged mactoolboxglue.c into macglue.c. A later step will be to separate out
the stuff that is only needed on classic-MacOS.
2001-05-19 12:31:09 +00:00
Tim Peters 91a364df17 Bugfix candidate.
Two exceedingly unlikely errors in dictresize():
1. The loop for finding the new size had an off-by-one error at the
   end (could over-index the polys[] vector).
2. The polys[] vector ended with a 0, apparently intended as a sentinel
   value but never used as such; i.e., it was never checked, so 0 could
   have been used *as* a polynomial.
Neither bug could trigger unless a dict grew to 2**30 slots; since that
would consume at least 12GB of memory just to hold the dict pointers,
I'm betting it's not the cause of the bug Fred's tracking down <wink>.
2001-05-19 07:04:38 +00:00
Fred Drake acb117eb11 Update a comment. 2001-05-18 21:50:02 +00:00
Fred Drake 97656a1c82 Simple conversion to PyUnit. 2001-05-18 21:45:35 +00:00
Fred Drake 5b811bee5d Simple conversion to PyUnit. 2001-05-18 21:38:52 +00:00
Fred Drake d657303910 Fix whitespace botch. 2001-05-18 21:03:40 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 0f8117f14a vgetargs1() and vgetargskeywords(): Replace uses of PyTuple_Size() and
PyTuple_GetItem() with PyTuple_GET_SIZE() and PyTuple_GET_ITEM().
    The code has already done a PyTuple_Check().
2001-05-18 20:57:38 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton da20fce9c3 Add a second special case to the inline function call code in eval_code2().
If we have a PyCFunction (builtin) and it is METH_VARARGS only, load
the args and dispatch to call_cfunction() directly.  This provides a
small speedup for perhaps the most common function calls -- builtins.
2001-05-18 20:53:14 +00:00
Fred Drake bd3090d4d6 Added test suite for the new HTMLParser module, originally from the
TAL/PageTemplate package for Zope.  This only needed a little boilerplate
change; the tests themselves are unchanged.
2001-05-18 15:32:59 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 8846d7178b A much improved HTML parser -- a replacement for sgmllib. The API is
derived from but not quite compatible with that of sgmllib, so it's a
new file.  I suppose it needs documentation, and htmllib needs to be
changed to use this instead of sgmllib, and sgmllib needs to be
declared obsolete.  But that can all be done later.

This code was first published as part of TAL (part of Zope Page
Templates), but that was strongly based on sgmllib anyway.  Authors
are Fred drake and Guido van Rossum.
2001-05-18 14:50:52 +00:00
Tim Peters 1928314ef4 Speed dictresize by collapsing its two passes into one; the reason given
in the comments for using two passes was bogus, as the only object that
can get decref'ed due to the copy is the dummy key, and decref'ing dummy
can't have side effects (for one thing, dummy is immortal!  for another,
it's a string object, not a potentially dangerous user-defined object).
2001-05-17 22:25:34 +00:00
Jack Jansen b686791b77 Added pymactoolboxglue.c and changed the exported symbols having to do with this. 2001-05-17 22:14:36 +00:00
Jack Jansen e8f53bb779 Dynamically loaded toolbox modules don't need to link against each other anymore, due to the new glue code that ties them together. 2001-05-17 22:12:55 +00:00
Jack Jansen f57a4a2e97 Glue code to connect obj_New and obj_Convert routines (the PyArg_Parse and Py_BuildTuple helpers) from one dynamically imported module to another. 2001-05-17 22:11:44 +00:00
Jack Jansen 0e04eecdbf First step in porting MacPython modules to OSX/unix: break all references between modules except for the obj_New() and obj_Convert() routines, the PyArg_Parse and Py_BuildValue helpers.
And these can now be vectored through glue routines (by defining USE_TOOLBOX_OBJECT_GLUE) which will do the necessary imports, whereupon the module's init routine will tell the glue routine about the real conversion routine address and everything is fine again.
2001-05-17 21:58:34 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 99f9baa331 Fixed botched indent in _init_mac() code. (It may never be executed,
but it still can't have any syntax errors.  Went a little too fast
there, Jack? :-)
2001-05-17 15:03:14 +00:00
Jack Jansen dd13a20490 Made distutils understand the MacPython Carbon runtime model. Distutils will build for the runtime model you are currently using for the interpreter. 2001-05-17 12:52:01 +00:00
Jack Jansen 6f84ed5afc Fixed macroman<->latin1 conversion. Some chars don't
exist in latin1, but at least the roundtrip results in the
same macroman characters.
2001-05-17 12:45:13 +00:00
Jack Jansen dfebe90c4c Fixed macroman<->latin1 conversion. Some characters don't exist in latin1, but at least the roundtrip gives
the correct macroman characters again.
2001-05-17 12:35:13 +00:00
Marc-André Lemburg 716cf91839 Moved the encoding map building logic from the individual mapping
codec files to codecs.py and added logic so that multi mappings
in the decoding maps now result in mappings to None (undefined mapping)
in the encoding maps.
2001-05-16 09:41:45 +00:00
Jack Jansen 5a4718e1ed Bah, somehow the macroman<->iso-latin-1 translation got lost during the merge. Checking in one fixed file to make sure MacCVS Pro isn't the problem. If it isn't a flurry of checkins will follow tomorrow. If it is... well... 2001-05-15 20:22:08 +00:00
Tim Peters d7ed3bf552 Speed tuple comparisons in two ways:
1. Omit the early-out EQ/NE "lengths different?" test.  Was unable to find
   any real code where it triggered, but it always costs.  The same is not
   true of list richcmps, where different-size lists appeared to get
   compared about half the time.
2. Because tuples are immutable, there's no need to refetch the lengths of
   both tuples from memory again on each loop trip.

BUG ALERT:  The tuple (and list) richcmp algorithm is arguably wrong,
because it won't believe there's any difference unless Py_EQ returns false
for some corresponding elements:

>>> class C:
...     def __lt__(x, y): return 1
...     __eq__ = __lt__
...
>>> C() < C()
1
>>> (C(),) < (C(),)
0
>>>

That doesn't make sense -- provided you believe the defn. of C makes sense.
2001-05-15 20:12:59 +00:00
Marc-André Lemburg fab96cc2ff Add NEWS item for new string methods. 2001-05-15 18:38:45 +00:00
Tim Peters 30324a7363 Just changed "x,y" to "x, y" everywhere (i.e., inserted horizontal space
after commas that didn't have any).
2001-05-15 17:19:16 +00:00
Guido van Rossum acfdf156aa Add quoted-printable codec 2001-05-15 15:34:07 +00:00
Fred Drake c0dac1a58c Beef up the unicode() description a bit, based on material from AMK's
"What's New in Python ..." documents.
2001-05-15 15:27:53 +00:00
Fred Drake da05e977f3 abspath(): Fix inconsistent indentation. 2001-05-15 15:23:01 +00:00
Marc-André Lemburg 2d9204199f This patch changes the way the string .encode() method works slightly
and introduces a new method .decode().

The major change is that strg.encode() will no longer try to convert
Unicode returns from the codec into a string, but instead pass along
the Unicode object as-is. The same is now true for all other codec
return types. The underlying C APIs were changed accordingly.

Note that even though this does have the potential of breaking
existing code, the chances are low since conversion from Unicode
previously took place using the default encoding which is normally
set to ASCII rendering this auto-conversion mechanism useless for
most Unicode encodings.

The good news is that you can now use .encode() and .decode() with
much greater ease and that the door was opened for better accessibility
of the builtin codecs.

As demonstration of the new feature, the patch includes a few new
codecs which allow string to string encoding and decoding (rot13,
hex, zip, uu, base64).

Written by Marc-Andre Lemburg. Copyright assigned to the PSF.
2001-05-15 12:00:02 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 2e0a654f6e Add warnings to the strop module, for to those functions that really
*are* obsolete; three variables and the maketrans() function are not
(yet) obsolete.

Add a compensating warnings.filterwarnings() call to test_strop.py.

Add this to the NEWS.
2001-05-15 02:14:44 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 9cba64318e Ignore 'build' and 'Makefile.pre'. 2001-05-15 01:53:40 +00:00
Tim Peters d401eddf91 Fix new compiler warnings. Also boost "start" from (C) int to long and
return a (C) long:  PyArg_ParseTuple and Py_BuildValue may not let us get
at the size_t we really want, but C int is clearly too small for a 64-bit
box, and both the start parameter and the return value should work for
large mapped files even on 32-bit boxes.  The code really needs to be
rethought from scratch (not by me, though ...).
2001-05-14 23:19:12 +00:00
Tim Peters 58e0a8c130 SF patch #418147 Fixes to allow compiling w/ Borland, from Stephen Hansen. 2001-05-14 22:32:33 +00:00
Fred Drake 460f0691df fcntl.ioctl(): Update error message; necessity noted by Michael Hudson. 2001-05-14 21:02:36 +00:00
Fred Drake 992d387540 Convert a couple of comments to docstrings -- PyUnit can use these when
the regression test is run in verbose mode.
2001-05-14 19:15:23 +00:00
Tim Peters 95b3f78622 pprint's workhorse _safe_repr() function took time quadratic in the # of
elements when crunching a list, dict or tuple.  Now takes linear time
instead -- huge speedup for even moderately large containers, and the
code is notably simpler too.
Added some basic "is the output correct?" tests to test_pprint.
2001-05-14 18:39:41 +00:00
Fred Drake 43913dd27c Convert the pprint test to use PyUnit. 2001-05-14 17:41:20 +00:00
Fred Drake b3384d3555 Make sure we include all of Python's numeric types in the data model
description, so that the introduction of complex is not a surprise.

This closes SF bug #423429.
2001-05-14 16:04:22 +00:00
Jack Jansen 6db483e679 Added a WITHOUT_FRAMEWORKS define to all the config files, so that on MacOS<=9 compiles use Universal Headers, not Carbon/Carbon.h. 2001-05-14 15:00:38 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 1bd797a257 Fix a typo, consistently spell ASCII in all caps, and insert blank
lines between paragraphs in Mark Hammond's news item about the default
encoding in posixmodule.  Resist the temptation to reflow paragraphs.
2001-05-14 13:53:38 +00:00
Mark Hammond 26cffde4c2 Fix the Py_FileSystemDefaultEncoding checkin - declare the variable in a fileobject.h, and initialize it in bltinmodule. 2001-05-14 12:17:34 +00:00
Greg Stein 834f4dd7c9 Fix the .find() method for memory maps.
1) it didn't obey the "start" parameter (and when it does, we must validate
   the value)
2) the return value needs to be an absolute index, rather than relative to
   some arbitrary point in the file

(checking CVS, it appears this method never worked; these changes bring it
 into line with typical .find() behavior)
2001-05-14 09:32:26 +00:00
Tim Peters a814db579d SF bug[ #423781: pprint.isrecursive() broken. 2001-05-14 07:05:58 +00:00
Mark Hammond 2a0af79269 Add mention of the default file system encoding for Windows. 2001-05-14 03:09:36 +00:00
Tim Peters a0599575aa A disgusting "fix" for the test___all__ failure under Windows. 2001-05-13 09:01:06 +00:00
Mark Hammond ef8b654bbe Add support for Windows using "mbcs" as the default Unicode encoding when dealing with the file system. As discussed on python-dev and in patch 410465. 2001-05-13 08:04:26 +00:00
Tim Peters 342c65e19a Aggressive reordering of dict comparisons. In case of collision, it stands
to reason that me_key is much more likely to match the key we're looking
for than to match dummy, and if the key is absent me_key is much more
likely to be NULL than dummy:  most dicts don't even have a dummy entry.
Running instrumented dict code over the test suite and some apps confirmed
that matching dummy was 200-300x less frequent than matching key in
practice.  So this reorders the tests to try the common case first.
It can lose if a large dict with many collisions is mostly deleted, not
resized, and then frequently searched, but that's hardly a case we
should be favoring.
2001-05-13 06:43:53 +00:00
Tim Peters 2f228e75e4 Get rid of the superstitious "~" in dict hashing's "i = (~hash) & mask".
The comment following used to say:
	/* We use ~hash instead of hash, as degenerate hash functions, such
	   as for ints <sigh>, can have lots of leading zeros. It's not
	   really a performance risk, but better safe than sorry.
	   12-Dec-00 tim:  so ~hash produces lots of leading ones instead --
	   what's the gain? */
That is, there was never a good reason for doing it.  And to the contrary,
as explained on Python-Dev last December, it tended to make the *sum*
(i + incr) & mask (which is the first table index examined in case of
collison) the same "too often" across distinct hashes.

Changing to the simpler "i = hash & mask" reduced the number of string-dict
collisions (== # number of times we go around the lookup for-loop) from about
6 million to 5 million during a full run of the test suite (these are
approximate because the test suite does some random stuff from run to run).
The number of collisions in non-string dicts also decreased, but not as
dramatically.

Note that this may, for a given dict, change the order (wrt previous
releases) of entries exposed by .keys(), .values() and .items().  A number
of std tests suffered bogus failures as a result.  For dicts keyed by
small ints, or (less so) by characters, the order is much more likely to be
in increasing order of key now; e.g.,

>>> d = {}
>>> for i in range(10):
...    d[i] = i
...
>>> d
{0: 0, 1: 1, 2: 2, 3: 3, 4: 4, 5: 5, 6: 6, 7: 7, 8: 8, 9: 9}
>>>

Unfortunately. people may latch on to that in small examples and draw a
bogus conclusion.

test_support.py
    Moved test_extcall's sortdict() into test_support, made it stronger,
    and imported sortdict into other std tests that needed it.
test_unicode.py
    Excluced cp875 from the "roundtrip over range(128)" test, because
    cp875 doesn't have a well-defined inverse for unicode("?", "cp875").
    See Python-Dev for excruciating details.
Cookie.py
    Chaged various output functions to sort dicts before building
    strings from them.
test_extcall
    Fiddled the expected-result file.  This remains sensitive to native
    dict ordering, because, e.g., if there are multiple errors in a
    keyword-arg dict (and test_extcall sets up many cases like that), the
    specific error Python complains about first depends on native dict
    ordering.
2001-05-13 00:19:31 +00:00
Jack Jansen 0194ad5c7d Got the first MacPython module working under MacOSX/MachO (gestalt). Main changes
are including Carbon/Carbon.h in stead of the old headers (unless WITHOUT_FRAMEWORKS
is defined, as it will be for classic MacPython) and selectively disabling all the
stuff that is unneeded in a unix-Python (event handling, etc).
2001-05-12 22:46:35 +00:00
Jack Jansen 6e68a7e74f Be more sensible about when to use TARGET_API_MAC_OS8 in stead of !TARGET_API_MAC_CARBON. This should greatly facilitate porting stuff to OSX in its MachO/BSD incarnation. 2001-05-12 21:31:34 +00:00