preserve spaces in the encoded/unencoded word boundaries. RFC 2047 is
ambiguous here, but most people expect the space to be preserved.
Really closes SF bug # 640110.
_split(): New implementation of ASCII line splitting which should do a
better job and not be subject to the various weird artifacts (bugs)
reported. This should also do a better job of higher-level syntactic
splits by trying first to split on semis, then commas, then
whitespace.
Use a Timbot-ly binary search for optimal non-ASCII split points for
better packing of header lines. This also lets us remove one
recursion call. Don't pass in firstline, but instead pass in the
actual line length we're shooting for. Also pass in the list of split
characters.
encode(): Pass in the list of split characters so applications can
have some control over what "higher level syntactic breaks" are.
Also,
decode_header(): Transform binascii.Errors which can occur when
decoding a base64 RFC 2047 header with bogus data, into an
email.Errors.HeaderParseError. Closes SF bug #696712.
_handle_multipart(): Ensure that if the preamble exists but does not
end in a newline, a newline is still added. Without this, the
boundary separator will end up on the preamble line, breaking the MIME
structure.
_make_boundary(): Handle differences in the decimal point character
based on the locale.
Charset: Alias __repr__ to __str__ for debugging.
header_encode(): When calling quopriMIME.header_encode(), set
maxlinelen=None so that the lower level function doesn't (also) try to
wrap/fold the line.
_max_append(): Change the comparison so that the new string is
concatenated if it's less than or equal to the max length.
header_encode(): Allow for maxlinelen == None to mean, don't do any
line splitting. This is because this module is mostly used by higher
level abstractions (Header.py) which already ensures line lengths. We
do this in a cheapo way by setting the max_encoding to some insanely
<100k wink> large number.
could be responsible for various unexplained problems with Python/OSA
interaction over the years):
- Enum values were passed as their string counterparts. Most applications
don't seem to mind this, but some do (InDesign).
- Attributes have never worked (!), as they were incorrectly passed
as parameters. Apparently nobody uses them much:-)
by putting the help book in an array. Somehow the fact that Python.app
(and, hence, pythonw) got an automatic help menu messed up Tkinter's
handling of the help menu.
- The applet logic has been replaced to bundlebuilder's bootstrap script
- Due to Apple being extremely string about argv[0], we need a way to
specify the actual executable name for use with sys.executable. See
the comment embedded in the code.
out a month's worth of checkins to libstdtypes.tex (including my
extended slice docs).
I think this checkin merges them all back in, but if you make one of
these checkins:
revision 1.97
date: 2002/06/14 00:27:13; author: nnorwitz
Use \code{True} (or False) instead of true/false.
Not sure if code is correct, but that is what's in this file.
I've seen \constant{True} in other places.
----------------------------
revision 1.95
date: 2002/05/22 20:39:43; author: bwarsaw
Jack's documentation for the U mode character on the file()
constructor, vetted by Barry.
----------------------------
revision 1.94
date: 2002/05/21 18:19:15; author: rhettinger
Patch 543387. Document deprecation of complex %, //,and divmod().
----------------------------
revision 1.93
date: 2002/05/15 15:45:25; author: rhettinger
Added missing index entries for mapping methods. Closes patch
#548693.
some checking may be in order.
checking them in? Oh well, this fixes various obvious mistakes and
changes a subsubsubsection (which doesn't exist) into a subsubsection
(which does). I'm not sure this matches the intent, but it seems to
read OK on a quick skim.
Eliminate extra blank line in shell output. Caused by stdout not being
flushed
upon completion of subprocess' Executive.runcode() when user code ends by
outputting an unterminated line, e.g. print "test",
- Implement the behavior as specified in PEP 277, meaning os.listdir()
will only return unicode strings if it is _called_ with a unicode
argument.
- And then return only unicode, don't attempt to convert to ASCII.
- Don't switch on Py_FileSystemDefaultEncoding, but simply use the
default encoding if Py_FileSystemDefaultEncoding is NULL. This means
os.listdir() can now raise UnicodeDecodeError if the default encoding
can't represent the directory entry. (This seems better than silcencing
the error and fall back to a byte string.)
- Attempted to decribe the above in Doc/lib/libos.tex.
- Reworded the Misc/NEWS items to reflect the current situation.
This checkin also fixes bug #696261, which was due to os.listdir() not
using Py_FileSystemDefaultEncoding, like all file system calls are
supposed to.