environment variable to set the filesystem encoding at Python startup.
sys.setfilesystemencoding() creates inconsistencies because it is unable to
reencode all filenames in all objects.
namespace if it occurs as a free variable in a nested block. This limitation
of the compiler has been lifted, and a new opcode introduced (DELETE_DEREF).
This sample was valid in 2.6, but fails to compile in 3.x without this change::
>>> def f():
... def print_error():
... print(e)
... try:
... something
... except Exception as e:
... print_error()
... # implicit "del e" here
This sample has always been invalid in Python, and now works::
>>> def outer(x):
... def inner():
... return x
... inner()
... del x
There is no need to bump the PYC magic number: the new opcode is used
for code that did not compile before.
a single `\UXXXXXXXX`, regardless of whether the character is printable
or not. Also, the "backslashreplace" error handler now joins surrogate
pairs into a single character on UCS-2 builds.
'once_registry'. This is bad as the warnings module had variables named
'defaultaction' and 'onceregistry' which are what people should be looking at
(technically those variables shouldn't be mucked with as they are undocumented,
but we all know better than to believe that isn't happening). So the variables
from _warnings have been renamed to come off as private and to avoid confusion
over what variable should be used.
Closes issue #9766. Thanks to Antoine Pitrou for the discovery.
Failure to do it may result in strange error messages or even crashes,
in admittedly convoluted cases that are normally syntax errors, like:
def f(*xx, __debug__): pass
Call _wfopen() on Windows, or fopen() otherwise. Return the new file object on
success, or NULL if the file cannot be open or (if PyErr_Occurred()) on unicode
error.
* On non-Windows OSes: the constructor accepts bytes filenames
and use surrogateescape for unicode filenames
* On Windows: use GetFileAttributesW() instead of GetFileAttributesA()
setup_context() replaces .pyc or .pyo filename suffix by .py, but it
didn't work if the filename contains a non-ascii character because the
function used the wrong unit for the length (number of characters
instead of the number of bytes).
With this patch, it uses unicode filenames instead of bytes filenames,
to fix the bug and to be fully unicode compliant.
svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/trunk
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r77402 | brett.cannon | 2010-01-09 20:56:19 -0600 (Sat, 09 Jan 2010) | 12 lines
DeprecationWarning is now silent by default.
This was originally suggested by Guido, discussed on the stdlib-sig mailing
list, and given the OK by Guido directly to me. What this change essentially
means is that Python has taken a policy of silencing warnings that are only
of interest to developers by default. This should prevent users from seeing
warnings which are triggered by an application being run against a new
interpreter before the app developer has a chance to update their code.
Closes issue #7319. Thanks to Antoine Pitrou, Ezio Melotti, and Brian Curtin
for helping with the issue.
........
r77505 | brett.cannon | 2010-01-14 14:00:28 -0600 (Thu, 14 Jan 2010) | 7 lines
The silencing of DeprecationWarning was not taking -3 into consideration. Since
Py3K warnings are DeprecationWarning by default this was causing -3 to
essentially be a no-op. Now DeprecationWarning is only silenced if -3 is not
used.
Closes issue #7700. Thanks Ezio Melotti and Florent Xicluna for patch help.
........
r77510 | brett.cannon | 2010-01-14 19:31:45 -0600 (Thu, 14 Jan 2010) | 1 line
Remove C++/C99-style comments.
........
svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/trunk
........
r81380 | brett.cannon | 2010-05-20 13:37:55 -0500 (Thu, 20 May 2010) | 8 lines
Turned out that if you used explicit relative import syntax
(e.g. from .os import sep) and it failed, import would still try the implicit
relative import semantics of an absolute import (from os import sep). That's
not right, so when level is negative, only do explicit relative import
semantics.
Fixes issue #7902. Thanks to Meador Inge for the patch.
........