Fix over-aggressive PyErr_Clear(). The same code fragment appears in
various guises in list.extend(), map(), filter(), zip(), and internally
in PySequence_Tuple().
* set_merge() cannot assume that the table doesn't resize during iteration.
* convert some unnecessary tests to asserts -- they were necessary in
dictobject.c because PyDict_Next() is a public function. The same is
not true for set_next().
* re-arrange the order of functions to more closely match the order
in dictobject.c. This makes it must easier to compare the two
and ought to simplify any issues of maintaining both.
was never called during interpreter shutdown GC, so the f_back!=NULL
assertion was correct. Now that generators get close()d during GC,
the assertion was being triggered because the generator close() was being
called as the top-level frame. However, nothing actually is broken by
this; it's just that the condition was unexpected in previous Python
versions.
a frozenset conversion when the initial search attempt fails with a
TypeError and the key is some type of set. Add a testcase.
* Eliminate a duplicate if-stmt.
a frozenset conversion when the initial search attempt fails with a
TypeError and the key is some type of set. Add a testcase.
* Eliminate a duplicate if-stmt.
s|=s, s&=s, s-=s, or s^=s). Add related tests.
* Improve names for several variables and functions.
* Provide alternate table access functions (next, contains, add, and discard)
that work with an entry argument instead of just a key. This improves
set-vs-set operations because we already have a hash value for each key
and can avoid unnecessary calls to PyObject_Hash(). Provides a 5% to 20%
speed-up for quick hashing elements like strings and integers. Provides
much more substantial improvements for slow hashing elements like tuples
or objects defining a custom __hash__() function.
* Have difference operations resize() when 1/5 of the elements are dummies.
Formerly, it was 1/6. The new ratio triggers less frequently and only
in cases that it can resize quicker and with greater benefit. The right
answer is probably either 1/4, 1/5, or 1/6. Picked the middle value for
an even trade-off between resize time and the space/time costs of dummy
entries.
* Bring in free list from dictionary code.
* Improve several comments.
* Differencing can leave many dummy entries. If more than
1/6 are dummies, then resize them away.
* Factor-out common code with new macro, PyAnySet_CheckExact.
* Give set_lookkey_string() a fast alternate path when no dummy entries
are present.
* Have set_swap_bodies() reset the hash field to -1 whenever either of
bodies is not a frozenset. Maintains the invariant of regular sets
always having -1 in the hash field; otherwise, any mutation would make
the hash value invalid.
* Use an entry pointer to simplify the code in frozenset_hash().
dictobject.c.
* Have frozenset_hash() use entry->hash instead of re-computing each
individual hash with PyObject_Hash(o);
* Finalize the dummy entry before a system exit.