the mapping dictionaries can now contain 1-n mappings, meaning
that character ordinals may be mapped to strings or Unicode object,
e.g. 0x0078 ('x') -> u"abc", causing the ordinal to be replaced by
the complete string or Unicode object instead of just one character.
Another feature introduced by the patch is that of mapping oridnals to
the emtpy string. This allows removing characters.
The patch is different from patch #103100 in that it does not cause a
performance hit for the normal use case of 1-1 mappings.
Written by Marc-Andre Lemburg, copyright assigned to Guido van Rossum.
the urljoin() function, which exercises the urlparse() and urlunparse()
functions as side effects.
(Moshe, why did we have perfectly empty tests checked in for this?)
an empty keywords dictionary (via apply() or the extended call syntax),
the keywords dict should be ignored. If the keywords dict is not empty,
TypeError should be raised. (Between the restructuring of the call
machinery and this patch, an empty dict in this situation would trigger
a SystemError via PyErr_BadInternalCall().)
Added regression tests to detect errors for this.
codec to not apply Latin-1 mappings for keys which are not found
in the mapping dictionaries, but instead treat them as undefined
mappings.
The patch was originally written by Martin v. Loewis with some
additional (cosmetic) changes and an updated test script
by Marc-Andre Lemburg.
The standard codecs were recreated from the most current files
available at the Unicode.org site using the Tools/scripts/gencodec.py
tool.
This patch closes the bugs #116285 and #119960.
1. When running in verbose mode, if any test happens to pass, print
a warning that the apparent success may be bogus (stdout isn't
compared in verbose mode). Been fooled by that too often.
2. When a test fails because the expected stdout doesn't match the
actual stdout, print as much of stdout as did match before the
first failing write. Else we get failures of the form "expected
'a', got 'b'" and a glance at the expected output file shows
500 instances of 'a' -- no idea where it failed, and, as in #1,
trying to run in verbose mode instead doesn't help because
stdout isn't compared then.
Christmas present to myself: the bisect module didn't define what
happened if the new element was already in the list. It so happens
that it inserted the new element "to the right" of all equal elements.
Since it wasn't defined, among other bad implications it was a mystery
how to use bisect to determine whether an element was already in the
list (I've seen code that *assumed* "to the right" without justification).
Added new methods bisect_left and insort_left that insert "to the left"
instead; made the old names bisect and insort aliases for the new names
bisect_right and insort_right; beefed up docstrings to explain what
these actually do; and added a std test for the bisect module.
information from the Expat library that is not part of its public API.
Do not print this information as the format of the string may (and will)
change as Expat evolves.
Add additional tests to make sure the ParserCreate() function raises the
right exceptions on illegal parameters.
roundtrip(): Show the offending syntax tree when things break; this makes
it a little easier to debug the module by adding test cases.
(Still need better tests for this module, but there's not enough time
today.)
also test join method of 8-bit strings.
Also changed the test() function to (1) compare the types of the
expected and actual result, and (2) in verbose mode, print the repr()
of the output.
testAAA(),
testAAB(): Added checks that the results are right.
testTooManyDocumentElements(): Added code to actually test this.
testCloneElementDeep()
testCloneElementShallow(): Filled these in with test code.
_testCloneElementCopiesAttributes(),
_setupCloneElement(): Helper functions used with the other
testCloneElement*() functions.
testCloneElementShallowCopiesAttributes(): No longer a separate test;
_setupCloneElement() uses _testCloneElementCopiesAttributes() to
test that this is always done.
testNormalize(): Added to check Node.normalize().
When a method is called with no regular arguments and * args, defer
the first arg is subclass check until after the * args have been
expanded.
N.B. The CALL_FUNCTION implementation is getting really hairy; should
review it to see if it can be simplified.
-- fixed negative lookbehind to work correctly at the beginning
of the target string (bug #117242)
-- improved syntax check; you can no longer refer to a group
inside itself (bug #110866)