Commit Graph

13 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Martin v. Löwis 10d7255249 Use raw-unicode-escape for the tests that require it. 2001-08-17 22:08:34 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis 339d0f720e Patch #445762: Support --disable-unicode
- Do not compile unicodeobject, unicodectype, and unicodedata if Unicode is disabled
- check for Py_USING_UNICODE in all places that use Unicode functions
- disables unicode literals, and the builtin functions
- add the types.StringTypes list
- remove Unicode literals from most tests.
2001-08-17 18:39:25 +00:00
Tim Peters fff5325078 Bug 415514 reported that e.g.
"%#x" % 0
blew up, at heart because C sprintf supplies a base marker if and only if
the value is not 0.  I then fixed that, by tolerating C's inconsistency
when it does %#x, and taking away that *Python* produced 0x0 when
formatting 0L (the "long" flavor of 0) under %#x itself.  But after talking
with Guido, we agreed it would be better to supply 0x for the short int
case too, despite that it's inconsistent with C, because C is inconsistent
with itself and with Python's hex(0) (plus, while "%#x" % 0 didn't work
before, "%#x" % 0L *did*, and returned "0x0").  Similarly for %#X conversion.
2001-04-12 18:38:48 +00:00
Tim Peters 711088d9b8 Fix for SF bug #415514: "%#x" % 0 caused assertion failure/abort.
http://sourceforge.net/tracker/index.php?func=detail&aid=415514&group_id=5470&atid=105470
For short ints, Python defers to the platform C library to figure out what
%#x should do.  The code asserted that the platform C returned a string
beginning with "0x".  However, that's not true when-- and only when --the
*value* being formatted is 0.  Changed the code to live with C's inconsistency
here.  In the meantime, the problem does not arise if you format a long 0 (0L)
instead.  However, that's because the code *we* wrote to do %#x conversions on
longs produces a leading "0x" regardless of value.  That's probably wrong too:
we should drop leading "0x", for consistency with C, when (& only when) formatting
0L.  So I changed the long formatting code to do that too.
2001-04-12 00:35:51 +00:00
Eric S. Raymond d8c628bd59 String method conversion.
(This one was trivial -- no actual string. references in it!)
2001-02-09 11:46:37 +00:00
Tim Peters d2bf3b7ca6 Whitespace normalization. Leaving tokenize_tests.py alone for now. 2001-01-18 02:22:22 +00:00
Fredrik Lundh f785042433 a bold attempt to fix things broken by MAL's verify patch: import
'verify' iff it's used by a test module...
2001-01-17 21:51:36 +00:00
Marc-André Lemburg 3661908a6a This patch removes all uses of "assert" in the regression test suite
and replaces them with a new API verify(). As a result the regression
suite will also perform its tests in optimization mode.

Written by Marc-Andre Lemburg. Copyright assigned to Guido van Rossum.
2001-01-17 19:11:13 +00:00
Andrew M. Kuchling c867f74a10 Change expected message for ValueError, fixing bug #126400 2000-12-20 00:55:46 +00:00
Andrew M. Kuchling 4d192b37ec Add test case for error message raised by bad % format character
(Oh, look, it adds another little utility function for testing)
2000-12-15 13:09:06 +00:00
Tim Peters a3a3a030af Fox for SF bug #123859: %[duxXo] long formats inconsistent. 2000-11-30 05:22:44 +00:00
Tim Peters 38fd5b6413 Derived from Martin's SF patch 110609: support unbounded ints in %d,i,u,x,X,o formats.
Note a curious extension to the std C rules:  x, X and o formatting can never produce
a sign character in C, so the '+' and ' ' flags are meaningless for them.  But
unbounded ints *can* produce a sign character under these conversions (no fixed-
width bitstring is wide enough to hold all negative values in 2's-comp form).  So
these flags become meaningful in Python when formatting a Python long which is too
big to fit in a C long.  This required shuffling around existing code, which hacked
x and X conversions to death when both the '#' and '0' flags were specified:  the
hacks weren't strong enough to deal with the simultaneous possibility of the ' ' or
'+' flags too, since signs were always meaningless before for x and X conversions.
Isomorphic shuffling was required in unicodeobject.c.
Also added dozens of non-trivial new unbounded-int test cases to test_format.py.
2000-09-21 05:43:11 +00:00
Marc-André Lemburg d70141a2d9 Marc-Andre Lemburg <mal@lemburg.com>:
New test for huge formatting strings (these could cause core
dumps in previous versions).

By Trent Mick.
2000-06-30 10:26:29 +00:00