always:
- #undef HAVE_CONFIG_H (because otherwise chardefs.h tries to include
strings.h)
- #include readline.h and history.h
and we never declare any readline function prototypes ourselves.
This makes it compile with readline 4.2, albeit with a few warnings.
Some of the remaining warnings are about completion_matches(), which
is renamed to rl_completion_matches().
I've tested it with various other versions, from 2.0 up, and they all
seem to work (some with warnings) -- but only on Red Hat Linux 6.2.
Fixing the warnings for readline 4.2 would break compatibility with
3.0 (and maybe even earlier versions), and readline doesn't seem to
have a way to test for its version at compile time, so I'd rather
leave the warnings in than break compilation with older versions.
problem reported by Neil Schemenauer on python-dev on 4/12/01, wth
subject "Problem with SSL and socketmodule on Debian Potato?".
It's tentative because Moshe objected, but Martin rebutted, and Moshe
seems unavailable for comments.
(Note that with OpenSSL 0.9.6a, I get a lot of compilation warnings
for socketmodule.c -- I'm assuming I can safely ignore these until 2.1
is released.)
before calling any callbacks. This is important
since the callback objects only look at themselves
to determine that they are invalide. This change
avoids a segfault when callbacks use a different
reference to an object in the process of being
deallocated.
This fixes SF bug #415660.
(with modification of existing dict elements!).
This is part of SF patch #409864: lazy fix for Pings bizarre scoping
crash.
The adaptation I made to Michael's patch was to change the error
handling to avoid masking other errors (moving the specific error
message to inside test_dict_inner()), and to insert a test for
dict==NULL at the start.
now raises NameError instead of UnboundLocalError, because the var in
question is definitely not local. (This affects test_scope.py)
Also update the recent fix by Ping using get_func_name(). Replace
tests of get_func_name() return value with call to get_func_desc() to
match all the other uses.
Calling an unbound method on a C extension class without providing
an instance can yield a segfault. Try "Exception.__init__()" or
"ValueError.__init__()".
This is a simple fix. The error-reporting bits in call_method
mistakenly treat the misleadingly-named variable "func" as a
function, when in fact it is a method.
If we let get_func_name take care of the work, all is fine.
- Removed the subsection numbering in section B (each time a new
license is inserted in the front, the others have to be renumbered).
- Changed the words in the intro to avoid implying that 1.6.1 is
GPL-compatible.
Make synopsis() load modules as '__temp__' so they don't clobber anything.
Change "constants" section to "data" section.
Don't show __builtins__ or __doc__ in "data" section.
For Bob Weiner: don't boldface text in Emacs shells or dumb terminals.
Remove Helper.__repr__ (it really belongs in site.py, and should be guarded by a check for len(inspect.stack) <= 2).
fixes bug #414940, and redoes the fix for #129417 in a different way.
It also fixes a number of other problems with locale-specific formatting:
If there is leading or trailing spaces, then no grouping should be applied
in the spaces, and the total length of the string should not be changed
due to grouping.
Also added test case which works only if the en_US locale is available.
value for the 'using' parameter of the get() function
or the BROWSER environment variable, if the thing
passed in is a path (as seems to be the case with KDE)
instead of a short name, examine the available
controllers to see if we can synthesize one based on a
pre-registered controller that shares the same base
name.
get(): If the user specifies a browser we don't know about, use
_synthesize() to attempt to create a usable controller.
Some small adjustments were needed in some of the browser classes to
support this.