idle.py:
Load the config files before anything else happens
XXX Need to define standard way to get files relative to the
IDLE install dir
PyShell.py:
ColorDelegator.py:
Get color defns out of IdleConf instead of IdlePrefs
EditorWindow.py:
Replace hard-coded font & window size with config options
Get extension names via IdleConf.getextensions
extend.py:
Obsolete. Extensions defined in config file.
ParenMatch.py:
Use config file for extension options.
Revise comment about parser requirements.
Simplify logic on find returning None.
Changes the one regexp in PyParse capable of making the re module blow the C
stack when passed unreasonable <0.9 wink> program text. Jeremy Hylton
provoked this with a program of the form:
x = (1,
2,
... # 9997 lines deleted here
10000,
)
Programs "like this" will no longer (no matter how many lines they contain)
trigger re death. OTOH, you can now make another class of unreasonable
program that will take much longer to parse.
* replaced build_lib.py with build_clib.py
* renamed the class in build_clib.py
* changed all references to 'build_lib' command in other command classes
when building extensions (uses build_lib's 'get_library_names()' method).
Ensure that the relative structure of source filenames is preserved in
the temporary build tree, eg. foo/bar.c compiles to
build/temp.<plat>/foo/bar.o.
Added 'build_clib' and 'build_temp' options (where to put C libraries
and where to put temporary compiler by-products, ie. object files).
Moved the call to 'check_library_list()' from 'run()' to 'finalize_options()'
-- that way, if we're going to crash we do so earlier, and we guarantee
that the library list is valid before we do anything (not just run).
Disallow directory separators in library names -- the compiled library
always goes right in 'build_clib'.
Added 'get_library_names()', so the "build_ext" command knows what
libraries to link every extension with.
filenames when constructing object filenames, even if output_dir given --
eg. "foo/bar.c" will compile to "foo/bar.o" without an output_dir, and to
"temp/foo/bar.o" if output_dir is "temp".
* 'build_dir' -> 'build_lib', which by default takes its value
straight from 'build_lib' in the 'build' command
* added 'build_temp' and 'inplace' options
* change 'build_extensions()' to put object files (compiler turds) in
'build_temp' dir
* complicated the name-of-extension-file shenanigans in
'build_extensions()' to support "in-place" extension building, i.e.
put the extension right into the source tree (handy for developers)
* added 'get_ext_fullname()', renamed 'extension_filename()' to
'get_ext_filename()', and tweaked the latter a bit -- all to support
the new filename shenanigans
This patch fixes 3 small problems.
1) If a map is used which is generated with 'makedbm -a',
the trailing '\0' is now handled correctely.
2) The nis.maps() function skipped the first map in the output list.
3) The library '-lnsl' is added in Setup.in (needed on Linux glibc2 and
Solaris systems. Maybe on other systems too?)
[I note that this still doesn't work when you are using NIS+ --GvR]
This patch is re: Lucas.Dejonge@awtpl.com.au: [Python-bugs-list] imaplib -
not complying with RFC (PR#218)
Lucas de Jonge reported that the code in imaplib that detects a read-write
to read-only change doesn't comply with RFC 2060.
discussed on c.l.py last January. Specifically:
- more characters allowed in section & option names
- if '=' is used to separate the option & value, the value can be
followed by a comment of the form '\s;'
lib-stdwin is no longer installed.
Increase the support level for other obsolete modules a bit: install
lib-old by default. It still isn't in the path by default, but at
least it's easier to add to your $PYTHONPATH this way. (This makes
sense because in 1.6 we're much more aggressive with declaring modules
obsolete.)
a new proc type (objobjproc), a new slot sq_contains to
PySequenceMethods, and a new flag Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_SEQUENCE_IN to
Py_TPFLAGS_DEFAULT. More to follow.
This will fold all ISO 8859 chars from the upper half of the
charset into the lower half, which is ...ummm.... unintened.
The second is a typo in the reference to options.escape in main().