number of tests, all because of the codecs/_multibytecodecs issue described
here (it's not a Py3K issue, just something Py3K discovers):
http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2006-April/064051.html
Hye-Shik Chang promised to look for a fix, so no need to fix it here. The
tests that are expected to break are:
test_codecencodings_cn
test_codecencodings_hk
test_codecencodings_jp
test_codecencodings_kr
test_codecencodings_tw
test_codecs
test_multibytecodec
This merge fixes an actual test failure (test_weakref) in this branch,
though, so I believe merging is the right thing to do anyway.
(branch-creation time) up to 43067. 43068 and 43069 contain a little
swapping action between re.py and sre.py, and this mightily confuses svn
merge, so later changes are going in separately.
This merge should break no additional tests.
The last-merged revision is going in a 'last_merge' property on '.' (the
branch directory.) Arbitrarily chosen, really; if there's a BCP for this, I
couldn't find it, but we can easily change it afterwards ;)
'dictproxy' (which is a read-only non-dict mapping type that can't be passed
to exec.)
The failures the test finds are behavioural differences between old- and
new-style classes that may or may not be intended.
Add (equally superficial) >>=/<<= test in the process. Relies on floats that
should be extremely close to the int '6' printing as '6.0', but I believe
that's a valid assumption ;P
Since the broken iterators are now new-style classes, iter() was able to do
the valid-iterator check sooner (on instantiation instead of on first call),
making the tests blow up sooner than expected.
spaces for indentation. Adds a '-ttt' option to turn the errors back into
warnings; I'm not yet sure whether that's desireable for Py3K.
Also remove the magic for setting the size of tabs based on emacs/vim-style
comments. Python now always considers tabstops to be every-8-spaces.
were some cases where an int was assumed.
Also had to change the string of the exception when dividing and int by zero.
Not sure what the best error message should be. Currently
5 / 0 yields the message: ZeroDivisionError: float division
That isn't entirely correct. But I'm not sure what else to do.