Some http servers will reject PUT, POST, and PATCH requests if they
do not have a Content-Length header.
Patch by James Rutherford, with additional cleaning up of the
'request' documentation by me.
Being able to read non-python text files is not a purpose of linecache, but it
does work and people use it. This changeset adjusts the language to make it
clear that Python files are not treated uniquely, but does not go so far as to
say reading non-python files is explicitly supported.
when interrupted by a signal not in the *sigset* parameter, if the signal
handler does not raise an exception. signal.sigtimedwait() recomputes the
timeout with a monotonic clock when it is retried.
Remove test_signal.test_sigwaitinfo_interrupted() because sigwaitinfo() doesn't
raise InterruptedError anymore if it is interrupted by a signal not in its
sigset parameter.
retried with the recomputed delay, except if the signal handler raises an
exception (PEP 475).
Modify also test_signal to use a monotonic clock instead of the system clock.
Use a Python source file (linecache.__file__) instead of /etc/passwd.
Modify also linecache docstrings to clarify the linecache is written to cache
Python source files, not any text files.
Setting attributes key, value and coded_value directly now is deprecated.
update() and setdefault() now transform and check keys. Comparing for
equality now takes into account attributes key, value and coded_value.
copy() now returns a Morsel, not a dict. repr() now contains all attributes.
Optimized checking keys and quoting values. Added new tests.
Original patch by Demian Brecht.
This allows manual selection of a specific unit such as usecs rather than the
use of a heuristic. This is intended to aid machine processing of timeit
output.
Patch by Serhiy Storchaka.
Merge 3.4
The current documentation only mentions heap[0] as the smallest element in the
beginning, and not in any of the methods' docs. There's no method to access the
minimal element without popping it, and the documentation of nsmallest is
confusing because it may suggest that min() is the way to go for n==1.
The current documentation only mentions heap[0] as the smallest element in the
beginning, and not in any of the methods' docs. There's no method to access the
minimal element without popping it, and the documentation of nsmallest is
confusing because it may suggest that min() is the way to go for n==1.