Lowercase 'tkColorChooser', 'tkFileDialog', 'tkSimpleDialog', and
'tkMessageBox' and remove 'tk'. Just lowercase 'tkFont' as 'font'
is already used. Adjust import.
Co-authored-by: Éric Araujo <merwok@netwok.org>
Co-authored-by: Terry Jan Reedy <tjreedy@udel.edu>
Co-authored-by: Tal Einat <532281+taleinat@users.noreply.github.com>
Add --with-wheel-pkg-dir=PATH option to the ./configure script. If
specified, the ensurepip module looks for setuptools and pip wheel
packages in this directory: if both are present, these wheel packages
are used instead of ensurepip bundled wheel packages.
Some Linux distribution packaging policies recommend against bundling
dependencies. For example, Fedora installs wheel packages in the
/usr/share/python-wheels/ directory and don't install the
ensurepip._bundled package.
ensurepip: Remove unused runpy import.
Add a private list of all stdlib modules: _Py_module_names.
* Add Tools/scripts/generate_module_names.py script.
* Makefile: Add "make regen-module-names" command.
* setup.py: Add --list-module-names option.
* GitHub Action and Travis CI also runs "make regen-module-names",
not ony "make regen-all", to ensure that the module names remains
up to date.
When stdin is a TTY, the test added in commit c13d89955d
is expected to fail. However, when it failed, it did not close
its file descriptors. This is flagged by the refleak tests (but
only when stdin is a TTY, which doesn't seem to be the case on CI).
The Py_FatalError() function and the faulthandler module now dump the
list of extension modules on a fatal error.
Add _Py_DumpExtensionModules() and _PyModule_IsExtension() internal
functions.
When trying to extract the error line for the error message there
are two distinct cases:
1. The input comes from a file, which means that we can extract the
error line by using `PyErr_ProgramTextObject` and which we already
do.
2. The input does not come from a file, at which point we need to get
the source code from the tokenizer:
* If the tokenizer's current line number is the same with the line
of the error, we get the line from `tok->buf` and we're ready.
* Else, we can extract the error line from the source code in the
following two ways:
* If the input comes from a string we have all the input
in `tok->str` and we can extract the error line from it.
* If the input comes from stdin, i.e. the interactive prompt, we
do not have access to the previous line. That's why a new
field `tok->stdin_content` is added which holds the whole input for the
current (multiline) statement or expression. We can then extract the
error line from `tok->stdin_content` like we do in the string case above.
Co-authored-by: Pablo Galindo <Pablogsal@gmail.com>
Before, using the * operator to repeat a bytearray would copy data from the start of
the internal buffer (ob_bytes) and not from the start of the actual data (ob_start).