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What's New in Python 2.4 alpha 1?
=================================

*Release date: DD-MMM-YYYY*

Core and builtins
-----------------

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- Bug #951851: Python crashed when reading import table of certain
  Windows DLLs.

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- Bug #215126.  The locals argument to eval() now accepts any mapping type.

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- marshal now shares interned strings. This change introduces
  a new .pyc magic.

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- Bug #966623. classes created with type() in an exec(, {}) don't
  have a __module__, but code in typeobject assumed it would always
  be there.

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- Python no longer relies on the LC_NUMERIC locale setting to be
  the "C" locale; as a result, it no longer tries to prevent changing
  the LC_NUMERIC category.

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- Bug #952807:  Unpickling pickled instances of subclasses of
  datetime.date, datetime.datetime and datetime.time could yield insane
  objects.  Thanks to Jiwon Seo for a fix.

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- Bug #845802: Python crashes when __init__.py is a directory.

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- Unicode objects received two new methods: iswide() and width().
  These query East Asian width information, as specified in Unicode
  TR11.
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- Improved the tuple hashing algorithm to give fewer collisions in
  common cases.  Fixes bug  #942952.

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- Implemented generator expressions (PEP 289).  Coded by Jiwon Seo.

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- Enabled the profiling of C extension functions (and builtins) - check
  new documentation and modified profiler and bdb modules for more details

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- Set file.name to the object passed to open (instead of a new string)

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- Moved tracebackobject into traceback.h and renamed to PyTracebackObject

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- Optimized the byte coding for multiple assignments like "a,b=b,a" and
  "a,b,c=1,2,3".  Improves their speed by 25% to 30%.

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- Limit the nested depth of a tuple for the second argument to isinstance()
  and issubclass() to the recursion limit of the interpreter.
  Fixes bug  #858016 .

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- Optimized dict iterators, creating separate types for each
  and having them reveal their length.  Also optimized the
  methods:  keys(), values(), and items().

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- Implemented a newcode opcode, LIST_APPEND, that simplifies
  the generated bytecode for list comprehensions and further
  improves their performance (about 35%).

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- Implemented rich comparisons for floats, which seems to make
  comparisons involving NaNs somewhat less surprising when the
  underlying C compiler actually implements C99 semantics.

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- Optimized list.extend() to save memory and no longer create
  intermediate sequences.  Also, extend() now pre-allocates the
  needed memory whenever the length of the iterable is known in
  advance -- this halves the time to extend the list.

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- Optimized list resize operations to make fewer calls to the system
  realloc().  Significantly speeds up list appends, list pops,
  list comprehensions, and the list contructor (when the input iterable
  length is not known).

- Changed the internal list over-allocation scheme.  For larger lists,
  overallocation ranged between 3% and 25%.  Now, it is a constant 12%.
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  For smaller lists (n<8), overallocation was upto eight elements.  Now,
  the overallocation is no more than three elements -- this improves space
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  utilization for applications that have large numbers of small lists.

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- Most list bodies now get re-used rather than freed.  Speeds up list
  instantiation and deletion by saving calls to malloc() and free().

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- The dict.update() method now accepts all the same argument forms
  as the dict() constructor.  This now includes item lists and/or
  keyword arguments.

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- Support for arbitrary objects supporting the read-only buffer
  interface as the co_code field of code objects (something that was
  only possible to create from C code) has been removed.

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- Made omitted callback and None equivalent for weakref.ref() and
  weakref.proxy(); the None case wasn't handled correctly in all
  cases.

- Fixed problem where PyWeakref_NewRef() and PyWeakref_NewProxy()
  assumed that initial existing entries in an object's weakref list
  would not be removed while allocating a new weakref object.  Since
  GC could be invoked at that time, however, that assumption was
  invalid.  In a truly obscure case of GC being triggered during
  creation for a new weakref object for an referent which already
  has a weakref without a callback which is only referenced from
  cyclic trash, a memory error can occur.  This consistently created a
  segfault in a debug build, but provided less predictable behavior in
  a release build.

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- input() builtin function now respects compiler flags such as
  __future__ statements.  SF patch 876178.

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- Removed PendingDeprecationWarning from apply().  apply() remains
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  deprecated, but the nuisance warning will not be issued.
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- At Python shutdown time (Py_Finalize()), 2.3 called cyclic garbage
  collection twice, both before and after tearing down modules.  The
  call after tearing down modules has been disabled, because too much
  of Python has been torn down then for __del__ methods and weakref
  callbacks to execute sanely.  The most common symptom was a sequence
  of uninformative messages on stderr when Python shut down, produced
  by threads trying to raise exceptions, but unable to report the nature
  of their problems because too much of the sys module had already been
  destroyed.

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- Removed FutureWarnings related to hex/oct literals and conversions
  and left shifts.  (Thanks to Kalle Svensson for SF patch 849227.)
  This addresses most of the remaining semantic changes promised by
  PEP 237, except for repr() of a long, which still shows the trailing
  'L'.  The PEP appears to promise warnings for operations that
  changed semantics compared to Python 2.3, but this is not
  implemented; we've suffered through enough warnings related to
  hex/oct literals and I think it's best to be silent now.

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- For str and unicode objects, the ljust(), center(), and rjust()
  methods now accept an optional argument specifying a fill
  character other than a space.

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- When method objects have an attribute that can be satisfied either
  by the function object or by the method object, the function
  object's attribute usually wins.  Christian Tismer pointed out that
  that this is really a mistake, because this only happens for special
  methods (like __reduce__) where the method object's version is
  really more appropriate than the function's attribute.  So from now
  on, all method attributes will have precedence over function
  attributes with the same name.

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- Critical bugfix, for SF bug 839548:  if a weakref with a callback,
  its callback, and its weakly referenced object, all became part of
  cyclic garbage during a single run of garbage collection, the order
  in which they were torn down was unpredictable.  It was possible for
  the callback to see partially-torn-down objects, leading to immediate
  segfaults, or, if the callback resurrected garbage objects, to
  resurrect insane objects that caused segfaults (or other surprises)
  later.  In one sense this wasn't surprising, because Python's cyclic gc
  had no knowledge of Python's weakref objects.  It does now.  When
  weakrefs with callbacks become part of cyclic garbage now, those
  weakrefs are cleared first.  The callbacks don't trigger then,
  preventing the problems.  If you need callbacks to trigger, then just
  as when cyclic gc is not involved, you need to write your code so
  that weakref objects outlive the objects they weakly reference.
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- Critical bugfix, for SF bug 840829:  if cyclic garbage collection
  happened to occur during a weakref callback for a new-style class
  instance, subtle memory corruption was the result (in a release build;
  in a debug build, a segfault occurred reliably very soon after).
  This has been repaired.

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- Compiler flags set in PYTHONSTARTUP are now active in __main__.

- Added two builtin types, set() and frozenset().

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- Added a reversed() builtin function that returns a reverse iterator
  over a sequence.

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- Added a sorted() builtin function that returns a new sorted list
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  from any iterable.
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- CObjects are now mutable (on the C level) through PyCObject_SetVoidPtr.

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- list.sort() now supports three keyword arguments:  cmp, key, and reverse.
  The key argument can be a function of one argument that extracts a
  comparison key from the original record:  mylist.sort(key=str.lower).
  The reverse argument is a boolean value and if True will change the
  sort order as if the comparison arguments were reversed.  In addition,
  the documentation has been amended to provide a guarantee that all sorts
  starting with Py2.3 are guaranteed to be stable (the relative order of
  records with equal keys is unchanged).

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- Added test whether wchar_t is signed or not. A signed wchar_t is not
  usable as internal unicode type base for Py_UNICODE since the
  unicode implementation assumes an unsigned type.

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- Fixed a bug in the cache of length-one Unicode strings that could
  lead to a seg fault.  The specific problem occurred when an earlier,
  non-fatal error left an uninitialized Unicode object in the
  freelist.

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- The % formatting operator now supports '%F' which is equivalent to
  '%f'.  This has always been documented but never implemented.

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- complex(obj) could leak a little memory if obj wasn't a string or
  number.

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- zip() with no arguments now returns an empty list instead of raising
  a TypeError exception.

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- obj.__contains__() now returns True/False instead of 1/0.  SF patch
  820195.

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- Python no longer tries to be smart about recursive comparisons.
  When comparing containers with cyclic references to themselves it
  will now just hit the recursion limit.  See SF patch 825639.

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- str and unicode builtin types now have rsplit() method that is
  same as split() except that it scans the string from the end
  working towards the beginning.  See SF feature request 801847.
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- Fixed a bug in object.__reduce_ex__ when using protocol 2.  Failure
  to clear the error when attempts to get the __getstate__ attribute
  fail caused intermittent errors and odd behavior.

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- buffer objects based on other objects no longer cache a pointer to
  the data and the data length.  Instead, the appropriate tp_as_buffer
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  method is called as necessary.
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- fixed: if a file is opened with an explicit buffer size >= 1, repeated
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  close() calls would attempt to free() the buffer already free()ed on
  the first call.

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Extension modules
-----------------

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- Added socket.getservbyport(), and make the second argument in
  getservbyname() and getservbyport() optional.

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- time module code that deals with input POSIX timestamps will now raise
  ValueError if more than a second is lost in precision when the
  timestamp is cast to the platform C time_t type.  There's no chance
  that the platform will do anything sensible with the result in such
  cases.  This includes ctime(), localtime() and gmtime().  Assorted
  fromtimestamp() and utcfromtimestamp() methods in the datetime module
  were also protected.  Closes bugs #919012 and 975996.
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- fcntl.ioctl now warns if the mutate flag is not specified.

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- nt now properly allows to refer to UNC roots, e.g. in nt.stat().

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- the weakref module now supports additional objects:  array.array,
  sre.pattern_objects, file objects, and sockets.

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- operator.isMappingType() and operator.isSequenceType() now give
  fewer false positives.

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- socket.sslerror is now a subclass of socket.error .  Also added
  socket.error to the socket module's C API.

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- Bug #920575: A problem that _locale module segfaults on
  nl_langinfo(ERA) caused by GNU libc's illegal NULL return is fixed.

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- array objects now support the copy module.  Also, their resizing
  scheme has been updated the same as for list objects.  The improves
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  the performance (speed and memory usage) of append() operations.
  Also, array.extend() now accepts any iterable argument for repeated
  appends without needing to create another temporary array.
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- cStringIO.writelines() now accepts any iterable argument and writes
  the lines one at a time rather than joining them and writing once.
  Made a parallel change to StringIO.writelines().  Saves memory and
  makes suitable for use with generator expressions.

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- time.strftime() now checks that the values in its time tuple argument
  are within the proper boundaries to prevent possible crashes from the
  platform's C library implementation of strftime().  Can possibly
  break code that uses values outside the range that didn't cause
  problems previously (such as sitting day of year to 0).  Fixes bug
  #897625.

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- The socket module now supports Bluetooth sockets, if the
  system has <bluetooth/bluetooth.h>

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- Added a collections module containing a new datatype, deque(),
  offering high-performance, thread-safe, memory friendly appends
  and pops on either side of the deque.

- Several modules now take advantage of collections.deque() for
  improved performance:  Queue, mutex, shlex, threading, and pydoc.

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- The operator module has two new functions, attrgetter() and
  itemgetter() which are useful for creating fast data extractor
  functions for map(), list.sort(), itertools.groupby(), and
  other functions that expect a function argument.

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- socket.SHUT_{RD,WR,RDWR} was added.

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- os.getsid was added.

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- The pwd module incorrectly advertised its struct type as
  struct_pwent; this has been renamed to struct_passwd.  (The old name
  is still supported for backwards compatibility.)

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- The xml.parsers.expat module now provides Expat 1.95.7.

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- socket.IPPROTO_IPV6 was added.

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- readline.clear_history was added.

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- select.select() now accepts sequences for its first three arguments.

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- cStringIO now supports the f.closed attribute.

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- The signal module now exposes SIGRTMIN and SIGRTMAX (if available).

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- curses module now supports use_default_colors().  [patch #739124]

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- Bug #811028: ncurses.h breakage on FreeBSD/MacOS X

- Bug #814613: INET_ADDRSTRLEN fix needed for all compilers on SGI

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- Implemented non-recursive SRE matching scheme (#757624).

- Implemented (?(id/name)yes|no) support in SRE (#572936).

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- random.seed() with no arguments or None uses time.time() as a default
  seed.  Modified to match Py2.2 behavior and use fractional seconds so
  that successive runs are more likely to produce different sequences.

- random.Random has a new method, getrandbits(k), which returns an int
  with k random bits.  This method is now an optional part of the API
  for user defined generators.  Any generator that defines genrandbits()
  can now use randrange() for ranges with a length >= 2**53.  Formerly,
  randrange would return only even numbers for ranges that large (see
  SF bug #812202).  Generators that do not define genrandbits() now
  issue a warning when randrange() is called with a range that large.

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- itertools has a new function, groupby() for aggregating iterables
  into groups sharing the same key (as determined by a key function).
  It offers some of functionality of SQL's groupby keyword and of
  the Unix uniq filter.
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- itertools now has a new function, tee() which produces two independent
  iterators from a single iterable.

- itertools.izip() with no arguments now returns an empty iterator instead
  of raising a TypeError exception.

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- Fixed #853061: allow BZ2Compressor.compress() to receive an empty string
  as parameter.

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Library
-------

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- Added Decimal.py per PEP 327.

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- Bug #981299: rsync is now a recognized protocol in urlparse that uses a
  "netloc" portion of a URL.
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- Bug #919012: shutil.move() will not try to move a directory into itself.
  Thanks Johannes Gijsbers.

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- Bug #934282: pydoc.stripid() is now case-insensitive.  Thanks Robin Becker.

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- Bug #823209:  cmath.log() now takes an optional base argument so that its
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  API matches math.log().
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- Bug #957381: distutils bdist_rpm no longer fails on recent RPM versions
  that generate a *-debuginfo.rpm.

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- os.path.devnull has been added for all supported platforms.

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- Fixed #877165: distutils now picks the right C++ compiler command
  on cygwin and mingw32.

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- urllib.urlopen().readline() now handles HTTP/0.9 correctly.

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- refactored site.py into functions.  Also wrote regression tests for the
  module.

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- The distutils install command now supports the --home option and
  installation scheme for all platforms.

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- asyncore.loop now has a repeat count parameter that defaults to
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  looping forever.
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- The distutils sdist command now ignores all .svn directories, in
  addition to CVS and RCS directories.  .svn directories hold
  administrative files for the Subversion source control system.

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- Added a new module: cookielib.  Automatic cookie handling for HTTP
  clients.  Also, support for cookielib has been added to urllib2, so
  urllib2.urlopen() can transparently handle cookies.

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- stringprep.py now uses built-in set() instead of sets.Set().

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- Bug #876278: Unbounded recursion in modulefinder

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- Bug #780300: Swap public and system ID in LexicalHandler.startDTD.
  Applications relying on the wrong order need to be corrected.

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- Bug #926075: Fixed a bug that returns a wrong pattern object
  for a string or unicode object in sre.compile() when a different
  type pattern with the same value exists.

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- Added countcallers arg to trace.Trace class (--trackcalls command line arg
  when run from the command prompt).

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- Fixed a caching bug in platform.platform() where the argument of 'terse' was
  not taken into consideration when caching value.

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- Added two new command-line arguments for profile (output file and
  default sort).

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- Added global runctx function to profile module

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- Add hlist missing entryconfigure and entrycget methods.

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- The ptcp154 codec was added for Kazakh character set support.

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- Support non-anonymous ftp URLs in urllib2.

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- The encodings package will now applies codec name aliases
  first before starting to try the import of the codec module.
  This simplifies overriding built-in codecs with external
  packages, e.g. the included CJK codecs with the JapaneseCodecs
  package, by adjusting the aliases dictionary in encodings.aliases
  accordingly.

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- base64 now supports RFC 3548 Base16, Base32, and Base64 encoding and
  decoding standards.

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- urllib2 now supports processors.  A processor is a handler that
  implements an xxx_request or xxx_response method.  These methods are
  called for all requests.

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- distutils compilers now compile source files in the same order as
  they are passed to the compiler.

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- pprint.pprint() and pprint.pformat() now have additional parameters
  indent, width and depth.

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- Patch #750542: pprint now will pretty print subclasses of list, tuple
  and dict too, as long as they don't overwrite __repr__().

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- Bug #848614: distutils' msvccompiler fails to find the MSVC6
  compiler because of incomplete registry entries.

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- httplib.HTTP.putrequest now offers to omit the implicit Accept-Encoding.

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- Patch #841977: modulefinder didn't find extension modules in packages

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- imaplib.IMAP4.thread was added.

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- Plugged a minor hole in tempfile.mktemp() due to the use of
  os.path.exists(), switched to using os.lstat() directly if possible.

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- bisect.py and heapq.py now have underlying C implementations
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  for better performance.

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- heapq.py has two new functions, nsmallest() and nlargest().
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- traceback.format_exc has been added (similar to print_exc but it returns
  a string).

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- xmlrpclib.MultiCall has been added.

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- poplib.POP3_SSL has been added.

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- tmpfile.mkstemp now returns an absolute path even if dir is relative.

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- urlparse is RFC 2396 compliant.

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- The fieldnames argument to the csv module's DictReader constructor is now
  optional.  If omitted, the first row of the file will be used as the
  list of fieldnames.

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- encodings.bz2_codec was added for access to bz2 compression
  using "a long string".encode('bz2')

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- Various improvements to unittest.py, realigned with PyUnit CVS.

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- dircache now passes exceptions to the caller, instead of returning
  empty lists.

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- The bsddb module and dbhash module now support the iterator and
  mapping protocols which make them more substitutable for dictionaries
  and shelves.

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- The csv module's DictReader and DictWriter classes now accept keyword
  arguments.  This was an omission in the initial implementation.

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- The email package handles some RFC 2231 parameters with missing
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  CHARSET fields better.  It also includes a patch to parameter
  parsing when semicolons appear inside quotes.
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- sets.py now runs under Py2.2.  In addition, the argument restrictions
  for most set methods (but not the operators) have been relaxed to
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  allow any iterable.
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- _strptime.py now has a behind-the-scenes caching mechanism for the most
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  recent TimeRE instance used along with the last five unique directive
  patterns.  The overall module was also made more thread-safe.

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- random.cunifvariate() and random.stdgamma() were deprecated in Py2.3
  and removed in Py2.4.

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- Bug #823328: urllib2.py's HTTP Digest Auth support works again.

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- Patch #873597: CJK codecs are imported into rank of default codecs.

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Tools/Demos
-----------

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- A hotshotmain script was added to the Tools/scripts directory that
  makes it easy to run a script under control of the hotshot profiler.

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- The db2pickle and pickle2db scripts can now dump/load gdbm files.

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- The file order on the command line of the pickle2db script was reversed.
  It is now [ picklefile ] dbfile.  This provides better symmetry with
  db2pickle.  The file arguments to both scripts are now source followed by
  destination in situations where both files are given.

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- The pydoc script will display a link to the module documentation for
  modules determined to be part of the core distribution.  The documentation
  base directory defaults to http://www.python.org/doc/current/lib/ but can
  be changed by setting the PYTHONDOCS environment variable.

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- texcheck.py now detects double word errors.

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- md5sum.py mistakenly opened input files in text mode by default, a
  silent and dangerous change from previous releases.  It once again
  opens input files in binary mode by default.  The -t and -b flags
  remain for compatibility with the 2.3 release, but -b is the default
  now.

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- py-electric-colon now works when pending-delete/delete-selection mode is
  in effect

- py-help-at-point is no longer bound to the F1 key - it's still bound to
  C-c C-h

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- Pynche was fixed to not crash when there is no ~/.pynche file and no
  -d option was given.

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Build
-----

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- Bug #978645: Modules/getpath.c now builds properly in --disable-framework
  build under OS X.

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- Profiling using gprof is now available if Python is configured with
  --enable-profiling.

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- Profiling the VM using the Pentium TSC is now possible if Python
  is configured --with-tsc.

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- In order to find libraries, setup.py now also looks in /lib64, for use
  on AMD64.

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- Bug #934635: Fixed a bug where the configure script couldn't detect
  getaddrinfo() properly if the KAME stack had SCTP support.

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- Support for missing ANSI C header files (limits.h, stddef.h, etc) was
  removed.

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- Systems requiring the D4, D6 or D7 variants of pthreads are no longer
  supported (see PEP 11).

- Universal newline support can no longer be disabled (see PEP 11).

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- Support for DGUX, SunOS 4, IRIX 4 and Minix was removed (see PEP 11).

- Support for systems requiring --with-dl-dld or --with-sgi-dl was removed
  (see PEP 11).

- Tests for sizeof(char) were removed since ANSI C mandates that
  sizeof(char) must be 1.

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C API
-----

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- Thanks to Anthony Tuininga, the datetime module now supplies a C API
  containing type-check macros and constructors.  See new docs in the
  Python/C API Reference Manual for details.

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- Private function _PyTime_DoubleToTimet added, to convert a Python
  timestamp (C double) to platform time_t with some out-of-bounds
  checking.  Declared in new header file timefuncs.h.  It would be
  good to expose some other internal timemodule.c functions there.

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- New public functions PyEval_EvaluateFrame and PyGen_New to expose
  generator objects.

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- New public functions Py_IncRef() and Py_DecRef(), exposing the
  functionality of the Py_XINCREF() and Py_XDECREF macros. Useful for
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  runtime dynamic embedding of Python.  See patch #938302, by Bob
  Ippolito.
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- Added a new macro, PySequence_Fast_ITEMS, which retrieves a fast sequence's
  underlying array of PyObject pointers.  Useful for high speed looping.

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- Created a new method flag, METH_COEXIST, which causes a method to be loaded
  even if already defined by a slot wrapper.  This allows a __contains__
  method, for example, to co-exist with a defined sq_contains slot.  This
  is helpful because the PyCFunction can take advantage of optimized calls
  whenever METH_O or METH_NOARGS flags are defined.

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- Added a new function, PyDict_Contains(d, k) which is like
  PySequence_Contains() but is specific to dictionaries and executes
  about 10% faster.

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- Added three new macros: Py_RETURN_NONE, Py_RETURN_TRUE, and Py_RETURN_FALSE.
  Each return the singleton they mention after Py_INCREF()ing them.

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- Added a new function, PyTuple_Pack(n, ...) for constructing tuples from a
  variable length argument list of Python objects without having to invoke
  the more complex machinery of Py_BuildValue().  PyTuple_Pack(3, a, b, c)
  is equivalent to Py_BuildValue("(OOO)", a, b, c).

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New platforms
-------------

Tests
-----

Windows
-------

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- The _winreg module could segfault when reading very large registry
  values, due to unchecked alloca() calls (SF bug 851056).  The fix is
  uses either PyMem_Malloc(n) or PyString_FromStringAndSize(NULL, n),
  as appropriate, followed by a size check.

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- file.truncate() could misbehave if the file was open for update
  (modes r+, rb+, w+, wb+), and the most recent file operation before
  the truncate() call was an input operation.  SF bug 801631.

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Mac
----


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What's New in Python 2.3 final?
===============================

*Release date: 29-Jul-2003*

IDLE
----

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- Bug 778400:  IDLE hangs when selecting "Edit with IDLE" from explorer.
  This was unique to Windows, and was fixed by adding an -n switch to
  the command the Windows installer creates to execute "Edit with IDLE"
  context-menu actions.

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- IDLE displays a new message upon startup:  some "personal firewall"
  kinds of programs (for example, ZoneAlarm) open a dialog of their
  own when any program opens a socket.  IDLE does use sockets, talking
  on the computer's internal loopback interface.  This connection is not
  visible on any external interface and no data is sent to or received
  from the Internet.  So, if you get such a dialog when opening IDLE,
  asking whether to let pythonw.exe talk to address 127.0.0.1, say yes,
  and rest assured no communication external to your machine is taking
  place.  If you don't allow it, IDLE won't be able to start.


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What's New in Python 2.3 release candidate 2?
=============================================

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*Release date: 24-Jul-2003*
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Core and builtins
-----------------

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- It is now possible to import from zipfiles containing additional
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  data bytes before the zip compatible archive.  Zipfiles containing a
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  comment at the end are still unsupported.

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Extension modules
-----------------

- A longstanding bug in the parser module's initialization could cause
  fatal internal refcount confusion when the module got initialized more
  than once.  This has been fixed.

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- Fixed memory leak in pyexpat; using the parser's ParseFile() method
  with open files that aren't instances of the standard file type
  caused an instance of the bound .read() method to be leaked on every
  call.

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- Fixed some leaks in the locale module.

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Library
-------

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- Lib/encodings/rot_13.py when used as a script, now more properly
  uses the first Python interpreter on your path.

- Removed caching of TimeRE (and thus LocaleTime) in _strptime.py to
  fix a locale related bug in the test suite.  Although another patch
  was needed to actually fix the problem, the cache code was not
  restored.

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IDLE
----

- Calltips patches.
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Build
-----

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- For MacOSX, added -mno-fused-madd to BASECFLAGS to fix test_coercion
  on Panther (OSX 10.3).

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C API
-----

Windows
-------

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- The tempfile module could do insane imports on Windows if PYTHONCASEOK
  was set, making temp file creation impossible.  Repaired.

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- Add a patch to workaround pthread_sigmask() bugs in Cygwin.

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Mac
---

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- Various fixes to pimp.

- Scripts runs with pythonw no longer had full window manager access.

- Don't force boot-disk-only install, for reasons unknown it causes
  more problems than it solves.

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What's New in Python 2.3 release candidate 1?
=============================================
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*Release date: 18-Jul-2003*

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Core and builtins
-----------------

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- The new function sys.getcheckinterval() returns the last value set
  by sys.setcheckinterval().

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- Several bugs in the symbol table phase of the compiler have been
  fixed.  Errors could be lost and compilation could fail without
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  reporting an error.  SF patch 763201.
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- The interpreter is now more robust about importing the warnings
  module.  In an executable generated by freeze or similar programs,
  earlier versions of 2.3 would fail if the warnings module could
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  not be found on the file system.  Fixes SF bug 771097.
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- A warning about assignments to module attributes that shadow
  builtins, present in earlier releases of 2.3, has been removed.
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- It is not possible to create subclasses of builtin types like str
  and tuple that define an itemsize.  Earlier releases of Python 2.3
  allowed this by mistake, leading to crashes and other problems.

- The thread_id is now initialized to 0 in a non-thread build.  SF bug
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  770247.

- SF bug 762891: "del p[key]" on proxy object no longer raises SystemError.
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Extension modules
-----------------

- weakref.proxy() can now handle "del obj[i]" for proxy objects
  defining __delitem__.  Formerly, it generated a SystemError.

- SSL no longer crashes the interpreter when the remote side disconnects.

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- On Unix the mmap module can again be used to map device files.

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- time.strptime now exclusively uses the Python implementation
  contained within the _strptime module.

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- The print slot of weakref proxy objects was removed, because it was
  not consistent with the object's repr slot.

- The mmap module only checks file size for regular files, not
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  character or block devices.  SF patch 708374.

- The cPickle Pickler garbage collection support was fixed to traverse
  the find_class attribute, if present.

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- There are several fixes for the bsddb3 wrapper module.
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  bsddb3 no longer crashes if an environment is closed before a cursor
  (SF bug 763298).

  The DB and DBEnv set_get_returns_none function was extended to take
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  a level instead of a boolean flag.  The new level 2 means that in
  addition, cursor.set()/.get() methods return None instead of raising
  an exception.
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  A typo was fixed in DBCursor.join_item(), preventing a crash.

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Library
-------

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- distutils now supports MSVC 7.1

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- doctest now examines all docstrings by default.  Previously, it would
  skip over functions with private names (as indicated by the underscore
  naming convention).  The old default created too much of a risk that
  user tests were being skipped inadvertently.  Note, this change could
  break code in the unlikely case that someone had intentionally put
  failing tests in the docstrings of private functions.  The breakage
  is easily fixable by specifying the old behavior when calling testmod()
  or Tester().

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- There were several fixes to the way dumbdbms are closed.  It's vital
  that a dumbdbm database be closed properly, else the on-disk data
  and directory files can be left in mutually inconsistent states.
  dumbdbm.py's _Database.__del__() method attempted to close the
  database properly, but a shutdown race in _Database._commit() could
  prevent this from working, so that a program trusting __del__() to
  get the on-disk files in synch could be badly surprised.  The race
  has been repaired.  A sync() method was also added so that shelve
  can guarantee data is written to disk.
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  The close() method can now be called more than once without complaint.
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- The classes in threading.py are now new-style classes.  That they
  weren't before was an oversight.

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- The urllib2 digest authentication handlers now define the correct
  auth_header.  The earlier versions would fail at runtime.

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- SF bug 763023: fix uncaught ZeroDivisionError in difflib ratio methods
  when there are no lines.

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- SF bug 763637: fix exception in Tkinter with after_cancel
  which could occur with Tk 8.4

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- SF bug 770601: CGIHTTPServer.py now passes the entire environment
  to child processes.

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- SF bug 765238: add filter to fnmatch's __all__.

- SF bug 748201: make time.strptime() error messages more helpful.

- SF patch 764470: Do not dump the args attribute of a Fault object in
  xmlrpclib.

- SF patch 549151: urllib and urllib2 now redirect POSTs on 301
  responses.

- SF patch 766650: The whichdb module was fixed to recognize dbm files
  generated by gdbm on OS/2 EMX.

- SF bugs 763047 and 763052: fixes bug of timezone value being left as
  -1 when ``time.tzname[0] == time.tzname[1] and not time.daylight``
  is true when it should only when time.daylight is true.

- SF bug 764548: re now allows subclasses of str and unicode to be
  used as patterns.

- SF bug 763637: In Tkinter, change after_cancel() to handle tuples
  of varying sizes.  Tk 8.4 returns a different number of values
  than Tk 8.3.

- SF bug 763023: difflib.ratio() did not catch zero division.

- The Queue module now has an __all__ attribute.
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Tools/Demos
-----------

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- See Lib/idlelib/NEWS.txt for IDLE news.

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- SF bug 753592: webchecker/wsgui now handles user supplied directories.

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- The trace.py script has been removed.  It is now in the standard library.
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Build
-----

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- Python now compiles with -fno-strict-aliasing if possible (SF bug 766696).

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- The socket module compiles on IRIX 6.5.10.

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- An irix64 system is treated the same way as an irix6 system (SF
  patch 764560).
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- Several definitions were missing on FreeBSD 5.x unless the
  __BSD_VISIBLE symbol was defined.  configure now defines it as
  needed.
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C API
-----

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- Unicode objects now support mbcs as a built-in encoding, so the C
  API can use it without deferring to the encodings package.

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Windows
-------

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- The Windows implementation of PyThread_start_new_thread() never
  checked error returns from Windows functions correctly.  As a result,
  it could claim to start a new thread even when the Microsoft
  _beginthread() function failed (due to "too many threads" -- this is
  on the order of thousands when it happens).  In these cases, the
  Python exception ::

      thread.error: can't start new thread

  is raised now.

- SF bug 766669: Prevent a GPF on interpreter exit when sockets are in
  use.  The interpreter now calls WSACleanup() from Py_Finalize()
  instead of from DLL teardown.

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Mac
---

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- Bundlebuilder now inherits default values in the right way.  It was
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  previously possible for app bundles to get a type of "BNDL" instead
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  of "APPL."  Other improvements include, a --build-id option to
  specify the CFBundleIdentifier and using the --python option to set
  the executable in the bundle.

- Fixed two bugs in MacOSX framework handling.
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- pythonw did not allow user interaction in 2.3rc1, this has been fixed.

- Python is now compiled with -mno-fused-madd, making all tests pass
  on Panther.

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What's New in Python 2.3 beta 2?
================================

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*Release date: 29-Jun-2003*
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Core and builtins
-----------------

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- A program can now set the environment variable PYTHONINSPECT to some
  string value in Python, and cause the interpreter to enter the
  interactive prompt at program exit, as if Python had been invoked
  with the -i option.

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- list.index() now accepts optional start and stop arguments.  Similar
  changes were made to UserList.index(). SF feature request 754014.

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- SF patch 751998 fixes an unwanted side effect of the previous fix
  for SF bug 742860 (the next item).

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- SF bug 742860: "WeakKeyDictionary __delitem__ uses iterkeys".  This
  wasn't threadsafe, was very inefficient (expected time O(len(dict))
  instead of O(1)), and could raise a spurious RuntimeError if another
  thread mutated the dict during __delitem__, or if a comparison function
  mutated it.  It also neglected to raise KeyError when the key wasn't
  present; didn't raise TypeError when the key wasn't of a weakly
  referencable type; and broke various more-or-less obscure dict
  invariants by using a sequence of equality comparisons over the whole
  set of dict keys instead of computing the key's hash code to narrow
  the search to those keys with the same hash code.  All of these are
  considered to be bugs.  A new implementation of __delitem__ repairs all
  that, but note that fixing these bugs may change visible behavior in
  code relying (whether intentionally or accidentally) on old behavior.
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- SF bug 734869: Fixed a compiler bug that caused a fatal error when
  compiling a list comprehension that contained another list comprehension
  embedded in a lambda expression.

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- SF bug 705231:  builtin pow() no longer lets the platform C pow()
  raise -1.0 to integer powers, because (at least) glibc gets it wrong
  in some cases.  The result should be -1.0 if the power is odd and 1.0
  if the power is even, and any float with a sufficiently large exponent
  is (mathematically) an exact even integer.

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- SF bug 759227: A new-style class that implements __nonzero__() must
  return a bool or int (but not an int subclass) from that method.  This
  matches the restriction on classic classes.

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- The encoding attribute has been added for file objects, and set to
  the terminal encoding on Unix and Windows.

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- The softspace attribute of file objects became read-only by oversight.
  It's writable again.

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- Reverted a 2.3 beta 1 change to iterators for subclasses of list and
  tuple.  By default, the iterators now access data elements directly
  instead of going through __getitem__.  If __getitem__ access is
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  preferred, then __iter__ can be overridden.
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- SF bug 735247: The staticmethod and super types participate in
  garbage collection. Before this change, it was possible for leaks to
  occur in functions with non-global free variables that used these types.

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Extension modules
-----------------

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- the socket module has a new exception, socket.timeout, to allow
  timeouts to be handled separately from other socket errors.

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- SF bug 751276: cPickle has fixed to propagate exceptions raised in
  user code.  In earlier versions, cPickle caught and ignored any
  exception when it performed operations that it expected to raise
  specific exceptions like AttributeError.

- cPickle Pickler and Unpickler objects now participate in garbage
  collection.

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- mimetools.choose_boundary() could return duplicate strings at times,
  especially likely on Windows.  The strings returned are now guaranteed
  unique within a single program run.

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- thread.interrupt_main() raises KeyboardInterrupt in the main thread.
  dummy_thread has also been modified to try to simulate the behavior.

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- array.array.insert() now treats negative indices as being relative
  to the end of the array, just like list.insert() does. (SF bug #739313)

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- The datetime module classes datetime, time, and timedelta are now
  properly subclassable.
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- _tkinter.{get|set}busywaitinterval was added.

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- itertools.islice() now accepts stop=None as documented.
  Fixes SF bug #730685.

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- the bsddb185 module is built in one restricted instance -
  /usr/include/db.h exists and defines HASHVERSION to be 2.  This is true
  for many BSD-derived systems.

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Library
-------

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- Some happy doctest extensions from Jim Fulton have been added to
  doctest.py.  These are already being used in Zope3.  The two
  primary ones:

  doctest.debug(module, name) extracts the doctests from the named object
  in the given module, puts them in a temp file, and starts pdb running
  on that file.  This is great when a doctest fails.

  doctest.DocTestSuite(module=None) returns a synthesized unittest
  TestSuite instance, to be run by the unittest framework, which
  runs all the doctests in the module.  This allows writing tests in
  doctest style (which can be clearer and shorter than writing tests
  in unittest style), without losing unittest's powerful testing
  framework features (which doctest lacks).

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- For compatibility with doctests created before 2.3, if an expected
  output block consists solely of "1" and the actual output block
  consists solely of "True", it's accepted as a match; similarly
  for "0" and "False".  This is quite un-doctest-like, but is practical.
  The behavior can be disabled by passing the new doctest module
  constant DONT_ACCEPT_TRUE_FOR_1 to the new optionflags optional
  argument.

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- ZipFile.testzip() now only traps BadZipfile exceptions.  Previously,
  a bare except caught to much and reported all errors as a problem
  in the archive.

- The logging module now has a new function, makeLogRecord() making
  LogHandler easier to interact with DatagramHandler and SocketHandler.

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- The cgitb module has been extended to support plain text display (SF patch
  569574).

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- A brand new version of IDLE (from the IDLEfork project at
  SourceForge) is now included as Lib/idlelib.  The old Tools/idle is
  no more.

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- Added a new module: trace (documentation missing).  This module used
  to be distributed in Tools/scripts.  It uses sys.settrace() to trace
  code execution -- either function calls or individual lines.  It can
  generate tracing output during execution or a post-mortem report of
  code coverage.

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- The threading module has new functions settrace() and setprofile()
  that cooperate with the functions of the same name in the sys
  module.  A function registered with the threading module will
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  be used for all threads it creates.  The new trace module uses this
  to provide tracing for code running in threads.
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- copy.py: applied SF patch 707900, fixing bug 702858, by Steven
  Taschuk.  Copying a new-style class that had a reference to itself
  didn't work.  (The same thing worked fine for old-style classes.)
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- difflib.py has two new functions:  context_diff() and unified_diff().

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- More fixes to urllib (SF 549151): (a) When redirecting, always use
  GET.  This is common practice and more-or-less sanctioned by the
  HTTP standard. (b) Add a handler for 307 redirection, which becomes
  an error for POST, but a regular redirect for GET and HEAD

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- Added optional 'onerror' argument to os.walk(), to control error
  handling.

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- inspect.is{method|data}descriptor was added, to allow pydoc display
  __doc__ of data descriptors.

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- Fixed socket speed loss caused by use of the _socketobject wrapper class
  in socket.py.

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- timeit.py now checks the current directory for imports.

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- urllib2.py now knows how to order proxy classes, so the user doesn't
  have to insert it in front of other classes, nor do dirty tricks like
  inserting a "dummy" HTTPHandler after a ProxyHandler when building an
  opener with proxy support.

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- Iterators have been added for dbm keys.

- random.Random objects can now be pickled.

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Tools/Demos
-----------

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- pydoc now offers help on keywords and topics.

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- Tools/idle is gone; long live Lib/idlelib.

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- diff.py prints file diffs in context, unified, or ndiff formats,
  providing a command line interface to difflib.py.
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- texcheck.py is a new script for making a rough validation of Python LaTeX
  files.

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Build
-----

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- Setting DESTDIR during 'make install' now allows specifying a
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  different root directory.

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C API
-----

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- PyType_Ready():  If a type declares that it participates in gc
  (Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_GC), and its base class does not, and its base class's
  tp_free slot is the default _PyObject_Del, and type does not define
  a tp_free slot itself, _PyObject_GC_Del is assigned to type->tp_free.
  Previously _PyObject_Del was inherited, which could at best lead to a
  segfault.  In addition, if even after this magic the type's tp_free
  slot is _PyObject_Del or NULL, and the type is a base type
  (Py_TPFLAGS_BASETYPE), TypeError is raised:  since the type is a base
  type, its dealloc function must call type->tp_free, and since the type
  is gc'able, tp_free must not be NULL or _PyObject_Del.

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- PyThreadState_SetAsyncExc(): A new API (deliberately accessible only
  from C) to interrupt a thread by sending it an exception.  It is
  intentional that you have to write your own C extension to call it
  from Python.


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New platforms
-------------

None this time.

Tests
-----

- test_imp rewritten so that it doesn't raise RuntimeError if run as a
  side effect of being imported ("import test.autotest").

Windows
-------

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- The Windows installer ships with Tcl/Tk 8.4.3 (upgraded from 8.4.1).

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- The installer always suggested that Python be installed on the C:
  drive, due to a hardcoded "C:" generated by the Wise installation
  wizard.  People with machines where C: is not the system drive
  usually want Python installed on whichever drive is their system drive
  instead.  We removed the hardcoded "C:", and two testers on machines
  where C: is not the system drive report that the installer now
  suggests their system drive.  Note that you can always select the
  directory you want in the "Select Destination Directory" dialog --
  that's what it's for.

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Mac
---

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- There's a new module called "autoGIL", which offers a mechanism to
  automatically release the Global Interpreter Lock when an event loop
  goes to sleep, allowing other threads to run. It's currently only
  supported on OSX, in the Mach-O version.
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- The OSA modules now allow direct access to properties of the
  toplevel application class (in AppleScript terminology).
- The Package Manager can now update itself.
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SourceForge Bugs and Patches Applied
------------------------------------

430160, 471893, 501716, 542562, 549151, 569574, 595837, 596434,
598163, 604210, 604716, 610332, 612627, 614770, 620190, 621891,
622042, 639139, 640236, 644345, 649742, 649742, 658233, 660022,
661318, 661676, 662807, 662923, 666219, 672855, 678325, 682347,
683486, 684981, 685773, 686254, 692776, 692959, 693094, 696777,
697989, 700827, 703666, 708495, 708604, 708901, 710733, 711902,
713722, 715782, 718286, 719359, 719367, 723136, 723831, 723962,
724588, 724767, 724767, 725942, 726150, 726446, 726869, 727051,
727719, 727719, 727805, 728277, 728563, 728656, 729096, 729103,
729293, 729297, 729300, 729317, 729395, 729622, 729817, 730170,
730296, 730594, 730685, 730826, 730963, 731209, 731403, 731504,
731514, 731626, 731635, 731643, 731644, 731644, 731689, 732124,
732143, 732234, 732284, 732284, 732479, 732761, 732783, 732951,
733667, 733781, 734118, 734231, 734869, 735051, 735293, 735527,
735613, 735694, 736962, 736962, 737970, 738066, 739313, 740055,
740234, 740301, 741806, 742126, 742741, 742860, 742860, 742911,
744041, 744104, 744238, 744687, 744877, 745055, 745478, 745525,
745620, 746012, 746304, 746366, 746801, 746953, 747348, 747667,
747954, 748846, 748849, 748973, 748975, 749191, 749210, 749759,
749831, 749911, 750008, 750092, 750542, 750595, 751038, 751107,
751276, 751451, 751916, 751941, 751956, 751998, 752671, 753451,
753602, 753617, 753845, 753925, 754014, 754340, 754447, 755031,
755087, 755147, 755245, 755683, 755987, 756032, 756996, 757058,
757229, 757818, 757821, 757822, 758112, 758910, 759227, 759889,
760257, 760703, 760792, 761104, 761337, 761519, 761830, 762455


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What's New in Python 2.3 beta 1?
================================

1231
*Release date: 25-Apr-2003*
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Core and builtins
-----------------

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- New format codes B, H, I, k and K have been implemented for
  PyArg_ParseTuple and PyBuild_Value.

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- New builtin function sum(seq, start=0) returns the sum of all the
  items in iterable object seq, plus start (items are normally numbers,
  and cannot be strings).

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- bool() called without arguments now returns False rather than
  raising an exception.  This is consistent with calling the
  constructors for the other builtin types -- called without argument
  they all return the false value of that type.  (SF patch #724135)

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- In support of PEP 269 (making the pgen parser generator accessible
  from Python), some changes to the pgen code structure were made; a
  few files that used to be linked only with pgen are now linked with
  Python itself.

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- The repr() of a weakref object now shows the __name__ attribute of
  the referenced object, if it has one.

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- super() no longer ignores data descriptors, except __class__.  See
  the thread started at
  http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2003-April/034338.html

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- list.insert(i, x) now interprets negative i as it would be
  interpreted by slicing, so negative values count from the end of the
  list.  This was the only place where such an interpretation was not
  placed on a list index.

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- range() now works even if the arguments are longs with magnitude
  larger than sys.maxint, as long as the total length of the sequence
  fits.  E.g., range(2**100, 2**101, 2**100) is the following list:
  [1267650600228229401496703205376L].  (SF patch #707427.)

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- Some horridly obscure problems were fixed involving interaction
  between garbage collection and old-style classes with "ambitious"
  getattr hooks.  If an old-style instance didn't have a __del__ method,
  but did have a __getattr__ hook, and the instance became reachable
  only from an unreachable cycle, and the hook resurrected or deleted
  unreachable objects when asked to resolve "__del__", anything up to
  a segfault could happen.  That's been repaired.

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- dict.pop now takes an optional argument specifying a default
  value to return if the key is not in the dict.  If a default is not
  given and the key is not found, a KeyError will still be raised.
  Parallel changes were made to UserDict.UserDict and UserDict.DictMixin.
  [SF patch #693753] (contributed by Michael Stone.)

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- sys.getfilesystemencoding() was added to expose
  Py_FileSystemDefaultEncoding.
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- New function sys.exc_clear() clears the current exception.  This is
  rarely needed, but can sometimes be useful to release objects
  referenced by the traceback held in sys.exc_info()[2].  (SF patch
  #693195.)

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- On 64-bit systems, a dictionary could contain duplicate long/int keys
  if the key value was larger than 2**32.  See SF bug #689659.
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- Fixed SF bug #663074. The codec system was using global static
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  variables to store internal data. As a result, any attempts to use the
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  unicode system with multiple active interpreters, or successive
  interpreter executions, would fail.

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- "%c" % u"a" now returns a unicode string instead of raising a
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  TypeError. u"%c" % 0xffffffff now raises a OverflowError instead
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  of a ValueError to be consistent with "%c" % 256. See SF patch #710127.
1303

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Extension modules
-----------------

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- The socket module now provides the functions inet_pton and inet_ntop
  for converting between string and packed representation of IP
  addresses.  There is also a new module variable, has_ipv6, which is
  True iff the current Python has IPv6 support.  See SF patch #658327.

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- Tkinter wrappers around Tcl variables now pass objects directly
  to Tcl, instead of first converting them to strings.

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- The .*? pattern in the re module is now special-cased to avoid the
  recursion limit.  (SF patch #720991 -- many thanks to Gary Herron
  and Greg Chapman.)

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- New function sys.call_tracing() allows pdb to debug code
  recursively.

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- New function gc.get_referents(obj) returns a list of objects
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  directly referenced by obj.  In effect, it exposes what the object's
  tp_traverse slot does, and can be helpful when debugging memory
  leaks.

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- The iconv module has been removed from this release.

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- The platform-independent routines for packing floats in IEEE formats
  (struct.pack's <f, >f, <d, and >d codes; pickle and cPickle's protocol 1
  pickling of floats) ignored that rounding can cause a carry to
  propagate.  The worst consequence was that, in rare cases, <f and >f
  could produce strings that, when unpacked again, were a factor of 2
  away from the original float.  This has been fixed.  See SF bug
  #705836.

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- New function time.tzset() provides access to the C library tzset()
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  function, if supported.  (SF patch #675422.)

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- Using createfilehandler, deletefilehandler, createtimerhandler functions
  on Tkinter.tkinter (_tkinter module) no longer crashes the interpreter.
  See SF bug #692416.

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Fix bug  
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- Modified the fcntl.ioctl() function to allow modification of a passed
  mutable buffer (for details see the reference documentation).

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- Made user requested changes to the itertools module.
  Subsumed the times() function into repeat().
  Added chain() and cycle().
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- The rotor module is now deprecated; the encryption algorithm it uses
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  is not believed to be secure, and including crypto code with Python
  has implications for exporting and importing it in various countries.

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- The socket module now always uses the _socketobject wrapper class, even on
  platforms which have dup(2).  The makefile() method is built directly
  on top of the socket without duplicating the file descriptor, allowing
  timeouts to work properly.

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Library
-------

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- New generator function os.walk() is an easy-to-use alternative to
  os.path.walk().  See os module docs for details.  os.path.walk()
  isn't deprecated at this time, but may become deprecated in a
  future release.

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- Added new module "platform" which provides a wide range of tools
  for querying platform dependent features.

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- netrc now allows ASCII punctuation characters in passwords.
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- shelve now supports the optional writeback argument, and exposes
  pickle protocol versions.

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- Several methods of nntplib.NNTP have grown an optional file argument
  which specifies a file where to divert the command's output
  (already supported by the body() method).  (SF patch #720468)

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- The self-documenting XML server library DocXMLRPCServer was added.

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- Support for internationalized domain names has been added through
  the 'idna' and 'punycode' encodings, the 'stringprep' module, the
  'mkstringprep' tool, and enhancements to the socket and httplib
  modules.

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- htmlentitydefs has two new dictionaries: name2codepoint maps
  HTML entity names to Unicode codepoints (as integers).
  codepoint2name is the reverse mapping. See SF patch #722017.

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- pdb has a new command, "debug", which lets you step through
  arbitrary code from the debugger's (pdb) prompt.

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- unittest.failUnlessEqual and its equivalent unittest.assertEqual now
  return 'not a == b' rather than 'a != b'.  This gives the desired
  result for classes that define __eq__ without defining __ne__.

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- sgmllib now supports SGML marked sections, in particular the
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  MS Office extensions.

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- The urllib module now offers support for the iterator protocol.
  SF patch 698520 contributed by Brett Cannon.

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- New module timeit provides a simple framework for timing the
  execution speed of expressions and statements.

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- sets.Set objects now support mixed-type __eq__ and __ne__, instead
  of raising TypeError.  If x is a Set object and y is a non-Set object,
  x == y is False, and x != y is True.  This is akin to the change made
  for mixed-type comparisons of datetime objects in 2.3a2; more info
  about the rationale is in the NEWS entry for that.  See also SF bug
  report <http://www.python.org/sf/693121>.

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- On Unix platforms, if os.listdir() is called with a Unicode argument,
  it now returns Unicode strings.  (This behavior was added earlier
  to the Windows NT/2k/XP version of os.listdir().)
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- Distutils: both 'py_modules' and 'packages' keywords can now be specified
  in core.setup().  Previously you could supply one or the other, but
  not both of them.  (SF patch #695090 from Bernhard Herzog)

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- New csv package makes it easy to read/write CSV files.

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- Module shlex has been extended to allow posix-like shell parsings,
  including a split() function for easy spliting of quoted strings and
  commands. An iterator interface was also implemented.

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Tools/Demos
-----------

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- New script combinerefs.py helps analyze new PYTHONDUMPREFS output.
  See the module docstring for details.

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Build
-----

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- Fix problem building on OSF1 because the compiler only accepted
  preprocessor directives that start in column 1.  (SF bug #691793.)
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C API
-----

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- Added PyGC_Collect(), equivalent to calling gc.collect().

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- PyThreadState_GetDict() was changed not to raise an exception or
  issue a fatal error when no current thread state is available.  This
  makes it possible to print dictionaries when no thread is active.

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- LONG_LONG was renamed to PY_LONG_LONG.  Extensions that use this and
  need compatibility with previous versions can use this:
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    #ifndef  PY_LONG_LONG
    #define  PY_LONG_LONG  LONG_LONG
    #endif
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- Added PyObject_SelfIter() to fill the tp_iter slot for the
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  typical case where the method returns its self argument.

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- The extended type structure used for heap types (new-style
  classes defined by Python code using a class statement) is now
  exported from object.h as PyHeapTypeObject.  (SF patch #696193.)
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New platforms
-------------

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None this time.
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Tests
-----

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- test_timeout now requires -u network to be passed to regrtest to run.
  See SF bug #692988.
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Windows
-------

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- os.fsync() now exists on Windows, and calls the Microsoft _commit()
  function.

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- New function winsound.MessageBeep() wraps the Win32 API
  MessageBeep().
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Mac
---

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- os.listdir() now returns Unicode strings on MacOS X when called with
  a Unicode argument. See the general news item under "Library".
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- A new method MacOS.WMAvailable() returns true if it is safe to access
  the window manager, false otherwise.
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- EasyDialogs dialogs are now movable-modal, and if the application is
  currently in the background they will ask to be moved to the foreground
  before displaying.
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- OSA Scripting support has improved a lot, and gensuitemodule.py can now
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  be used by mere mortals. The documentation is now also more or less
  complete.
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- The IDE (in a framework build) now includes introductory documentation
  in Apple Help Viewer format.
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What's New in Python 2.3 alpha 2?
=================================

1507
*Release date: 19-Feb-2003*
1508 1509

Core and builtins
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-----------------
1511

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- Negative positions returned from PEP 293 error callbacks are now
  treated as being relative to the end of the input string. Positions
  that are out of bounds raise an IndexError.

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- sys.path[0] (the directory from which the script is loaded) is now
  turned into an absolute pathname, unless it is the empty string.
  (SF patch #664376.)

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- Finally fixed the bug in compile() and exec where a string ending
  with an indented code block but no newline would raise SyntaxError.
  This would have been a four-line change in parsetok.c...  Except
  codeop.py depends on this behavior, so a compilation flag had to be
  invented that causes the tokenizer to revert to the old behavior;
  this required extra changes to 2 .h files, 2 .c files, and 2 .py
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  files.  (Fixes SF bug #501622.)
1527

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- If a new-style class defines neither __new__ nor __init__, its
  constructor would ignore all arguments.  This is changed now: the
  constructor refuses arguments in this case.  This might break code
  that worked under Python 2.2.  The simplest fix is to add a no-op
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  __init__: ``def __init__(self, *args, **kw): pass``.
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- Through a bytecode optimizer bug (and I bet you didn't even know
  Python *had* a bytecode optimizer :-), "unsigned" hex/oct constants
  with a leading minus sign would come out with the wrong sign.
  ("Unsigned" hex/oct constants are those with a face value in the
  range sys.maxint+1 through sys.maxint*2+1, inclusive; these have
  always been interpreted as negative numbers through sign folding.)
  E.g. 0xffffffff is -1, and -(0xffffffff) is 1, but -0xffffffff would
  come out as -4294967295.  This was the case in Python 2.2 through
  2.2.2 and 2.3a1, and in Python 2.4 it will once again have that
  value, but according to PEP 237 it really needs to be 1 now.  This
  will be backported to Python 2.2.3 a well.  (SF #660455)

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- int(s, base) sometimes sign-folds hex and oct constants; it only
  does this when base is 0 and s.strip() starts with a '0'.  When the
  sign is actually folded, as in int("0xffffffff", 0) on a 32-bit
  machine, which returns -1, a FutureWarning is now issued; in Python
  2.4, this will return 4294967295L, as do int("+0xffffffff", 0) and
  int("0xffffffff", 16) right now.  (PEP 347)

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- super(X, x): x may now be a proxy for an X instance, i.e.
  issubclass(x.__class__, X) but not issubclass(type(x), X).

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- isinstance(x, X): if X is a new-style class, this is now equivalent
  to issubclass(type(x), X) or issubclass(x.__class__, X).  Previously
  only type(x) was tested.  (For classic classes this was already the
  case.)

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- compile(), eval() and the exec statement now fully support source code
  passed as unicode strings.

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- int subclasses can be initialized with longs if the value fits in an int.
  See SF bug #683467.

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- long(string, base) takes time linear in len(string) when base is a power
  of 2 now.  It used to take time quadratic in len(string).

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- filter returns now Unicode results for Unicode arguments.

1572 1573
- raw_input can now return Unicode objects.

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- List objects' sort() method now accepts None as the comparison function.
  Passing None is semantically identical to calling sort() with no
  arguments.

1578 1579 1580
- Fixed crash when printing a subclass of str and __str__ returned self.
  See SF bug #667147.

1581
- Fixed an invalid RuntimeWarning and an undetected error when trying
1582
  to convert a long integer into a float which couldn't fit.
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  See SF bug #676155.

1585
- Function objects now have a __module__ attribute that is bound to
1586
  the name of the module in which the function was defined.  This
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  applies for C functions and methods as well as functions and methods
  defined in Python.  This attribute is used by pickle.whichmodule(),
  which changes the behavior of whichmodule slightly.  In Python 2.2
  whichmodule() returns "__main__" for functions that are not defined
  at the top-level of a module (examples: methods, nested functions).
  Now whichmodule() will return the proper module name.
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Extension modules
-----------------

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- operator.isNumberType() now checks that the object has a nb_int or
  nb_float slot, rather than simply checking whether it has a non-NULL
  tp_as_number pointer.

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- The imp module now has ways to acquire and release the "import
  lock": imp.acquire_lock() and imp.release_lock().  Note: this is a
  reentrant lock, so releasing the lock only truly releases it when
  this is the last release_lock() call.  You can check with
  imp.lock_held().  (SF bug #580952 and patch #683257.)

1607 1608
- Change to cPickle to match pickle.py (see below and PEP 307).

1609 1610
- Fix some bugs in the parser module.  SF bug #678518.

1611
- Thanks to Scott David Daniels, a subtle bug in how the zlib
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  extension implemented flush() was fixed.  Scott also rewrote the
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  zlib test suite using the unittest module.  (SF bug #640230 and
  patch #678531.)

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- Added an itertools module containing high speed, memory efficient
  looping constructs inspired by tools from Haskell and SML.

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- The SSL module now handles sockets with a timeout set correctly (SF
  patch #675750, fixing SF bug #675552).

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- os/posixmodule has grown the sysexits.h constants (EX_OK and friends).

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- Fixed broken threadstate swap in readline that could cause fatal
  errors when a readline hook was being invoked while a background
  thread was active.  (SF bugs #660476 and #513033.)

1628 1629
- fcntl now exposes the strops.h I_* constants.

1630 1631 1632
- Fix a crash on Solaris that occurred when calling close() on
  an mmap'ed file which was already closed.  (SF patch #665913)

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1633
- Fixed several serious bugs in the zipimport implementation.
1634

1635 1636
- datetime changes:

1637 1638
  The date class is now properly subclassable.  (SF bug #720908)

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  The datetime and datetimetz classes have been collapsed into a single
  datetime class, and likewise the time and timetz classes into a single
  time class.  Previously, a datetimetz object with tzinfo=None acted
  exactly like a datetime object, and similarly for timetz.  This wasn't
  enough of a difference to justify distinct classes, and life is simpler
  now.

1646
  today() and now() now round system timestamps to the closest
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  microsecond <http://www.python.org/sf/661086>.  This repairs an
  irritation most likely seen on Windows systems.
1649

1650
  In dt.astimezone(tz), if tz.utcoffset(dt) returns a duration,
1651
  ValueError is raised if tz.dst(dt) returns None (2.3a1 treated it
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  as 0 instead, but a tzinfo subclass wishing to participate in
  time zone conversion has to take a stand on whether it supports
  DST; if you don't care about DST, then code dst() to return 0 minutes,
  meaning that DST is never in effect).
1656

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  The tzinfo methods utcoffset() and dst() must return a timedelta object
  (or None) now.  In 2.3a1 they could also return an int or long, but that
  was an unhelpfully redundant leftover from an earlier version wherein
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  they couldn't return a timedelta.  TOOWTDI.

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  The example tzinfo class for local time had a bug.  It was replaced
  by a later example coded by Guido.

1665
  datetime.astimezone(tz) no longer raises an exception when the
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  input datetime has no UTC equivalent in tz.  For typical "hybrid" time
  zones (a single tzinfo subclass modeling both standard and daylight
  time), this case can arise one hour per year, at the hour daylight time
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  ends.  See new docs for details.  In short, the new behavior mimics
  the local wall clock's behavior of repeating an hour in local time.

  dt.astimezone() can no longer be used to convert between naive and aware
  datetime objects.  If you merely want to attach, or remove, a tzinfo
  object, without any conversion of date and time members, use
  dt.replace(tzinfo=whatever) instead, where "whatever" is None or a
  tzinfo subclass instance.

  A new method tzinfo.fromutc(dt) can be overridden in tzinfo subclasses
  to give complete control over how a UTC time is to be converted to
  a local time.  The default astimezone() implementation calls fromutc()
  as its last step, so a tzinfo subclass can affect that too by overriding
  fromutc().  It's expected that the default fromutc() implementation will
  be suitable as-is for "almost all" time zone subclasses, but the
  creativity of political time zone fiddling appears unbounded -- fromutc()
  allows the highly motivated to emulate any scheme expressible in Python.
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  datetime.now():  The optional tzinfo argument was undocumented (that's
  repaired), and its name was changed to tz ("tzinfo" is overloaded enough
  already).  With a tz argument, now(tz) used to return the local date
  and time, and attach tz to it, without any conversion of date and time
  members.  This was less than useful.  Now now(tz) returns the current
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  date and time as local time in tz's time zone, akin to ::

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      tz.fromutc(datetime.utcnow().replace(tzinfo=utc))
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  where "utc" is an instance of a tzinfo subclass modeling UTC.  Without
  a tz argument, now() continues to return the current local date and time,
  as a naive datetime object.

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  datetime.fromtimestamp():  Like datetime.now() above, this had less than
  useful behavior when the optional tinzo argument was specified.  See
  also SF bug report <http://www.python.org/sf/660872>.

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  date and datetime comparison:  In order to prevent comparison from
  falling back to the default compare-object-addresses strategy, these
  raised TypeError whenever they didn't understand the other object type.
  They still do, except when the other object has a "timetuple" attribute,
  in which case they return NotImplemented now.  This gives other
  datetime objects (e.g., mxDateTime) a chance to intercept the
  comparison.

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  date, time, datetime and timedelta comparison:  When the exception
  for mixed-type comparisons in the last paragraph doesn't apply, if
  the comparison is == then False is returned, and if the comparison is
  != then True is returned.  Because dict lookup and the "in" operator
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  only invoke __eq__, this allows, for example, ::
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      if some_datetime in some_sequence:
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  and ::

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      some_dict[some_timedelta] = whatever

  to work as expected, without raising TypeError just because the
  sequence is heterogeneous, or the dict has mixed-type keys.  [This
  seems like a good idea to implement for all mixed-type comparisons
  that don't want to allow falling back to address comparison.]

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  The constructors building a datetime from a timestamp could raise
  ValueError if the platform C localtime()/gmtime() inserted "leap
  seconds".  Leap seconds are ignored now.  On such platforms, it's
  possible to have timestamps that differ by a second, yet where
  datetimes constructed from them are equal.

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  The pickle format of date, time and datetime objects has changed
  completely.  The undocumented pickler and unpickler functions no
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  longer exist.  The undocumented __setstate__() and __getstate__()
  methods no longer exist either.
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Library
-------

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- The logging module was updated slightly; the WARN level was renamed
  to WARNING, and the matching function/method warn() to warning().

- The pickle and cPickle modules were updated with a new pickling
  protocol (documented by pickletools.py, see below) and several
  extensions to the pickle customization API (__reduce__, __setstate__
  etc.).  The copy module now uses more of the pickle customization
  API to copy objects that don't implement __copy__ or __deepcopy__.
  See PEP 307 for details.

- The distutils "register" command now uses http://www.python.org/pypi
  as the default repository.  (See PEP 301.)

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- the platform dependent path related variables sep, altsep, extsep,
  pathsep, curdir, pardir and defpath are now defined in the platform
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  dependent path modules (e.g. ntpath.py) rather than os.py, so these
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  variables are now available via os.path.  They continue to be
  available from the os module.
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  (see <http://www.python.org/sf/680789>).
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- array.array was added to the types repr.py knows about (see
  <http://www.python.org/sf/680789>).

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- The new pickletools.py contains lots of documentation about pickle
  internals, and supplies some helpers for working with pickles, such as
  a symbolic pickle disassembler.

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- Xmlrpclib.py now supports the builtin boolean type.

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- py_compile has a new 'doraise' flag and a new PyCompileError
  exception.

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- SimpleXMLRPCServer now supports CGI through the CGIXMLRPCRequestHandler
  class.

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- The sets module now raises TypeError in __cmp__, to clarify that
  sets are not intended to be three-way-compared; the comparison
  operators are overloaded as subset/superset tests.

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- Bastion.py and rexec.py are disabled.  These modules are not safe in
  Python 2.2. or 2.3.

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- realpath is now exported when doing ``from poxixpath import *``.
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  It is also exported for ntpath, macpath, and os2emxpath.
  See SF bug #659228.

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- New module tarfile from Lars Gustäbel provides a comprehensive interface
  to tar archive files with transparent gzip and bzip2 compression.
  See SF patch #651082.

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- urlparse can now parse imap:// URLs.  See SF feature request #618024.
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- Tkinter.Canvas.scan_dragto() provides an optional parameter to support
  the gain value which is passed to Tk.  SF bug# 602259.

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- Fix logging.handlers.SysLogHandler protocol when using UNIX domain sockets.
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  See SF patch #642974.
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- The dospath module was deleted.  Use the ntpath module when manipulating
  DOS paths from other platforms.

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Tools/Demos
-----------

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- Two new scripts (db2pickle.py and pickle2db.py) were added to the
  Tools/scripts directory to facilitate conversion from the old bsddb module
  to the new one.  While the user-visible API of the new module is
  compatible with the old one, it's likely that the version of the
  underlying database library has changed.  To convert from the old library,
  run the db2pickle.py script using the old version of Python to convert it
  to a pickle file.  After upgrading Python, run the pickle2db.py script
  using the new version of Python to reconstitute your database.  For
  example:

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    % python2.2 db2pickle.py -h some.db > some.pickle
    % python2.3 pickle2db.py -h some.db.new < some.pickle
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  Run the scripts without any args to get a usage message.

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Build
-----

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- The audio driver tests (test_ossaudiodev.py and
  test_linuxaudiodev.py) are no longer run by default.  This is
  because they don't always work, depending on your hardware and
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  software.  To run these tests, you must use an invocation like ::

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    ./python Lib/test/regrtest.py -u audio test_ossaudiodev

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- On systems which build using the configure script, compiler flags which
  used to be lumped together using the OPT flag have been split into two
  groups, OPT and BASECFLAGS.  OPT is meant to carry just optimization- and
  debug-related flags like "-g" and "-O3".  BASECFLAGS is meant to carry
  compiler flags that are required to get a clean compile.  On some
  platforms (many Linux flavors in particular) BASECFLAGS will be empty by
  default.  On others, such as Mac OS X and SCO, it will contain required
  flags.  This change allows people building Python to override OPT without
  fear of clobbering compiler flags which are required to get a clean build.

- On Darwin/Mac OS X platforms, /sw/lib and /sw/include are added to the
  relevant search lists in setup.py.  This allows users building Python to
  take advantage of the many packages available from the fink project
  <http://fink.sf.net/>.

- A new Makefile target, scriptsinstall, installs a number of useful scripts
  from the Tools/scripts directory.

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C API
-----

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- PyEval_GetFrame() is now declared to return a ``PyFrameObject *``
  instead of a plain ``PyObject *``.  (SF patch #686601.)
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- PyNumber_Check() now checks that the object has a nb_int or nb_float
  slot, rather than simply checking whether it has a non-NULL
  tp_as_number pointer.

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- A C type that inherits from a base type that defines tp_as_buffer
  will now inherit the tp_as_buffer pointer if it doesn't define one.
  (SF #681367)

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- The PyArg_Parse functions now issue a DeprecationWarning if a float
  argument is provided when an integer is specified (this affects the 'b',
  'B', 'h', 'H', 'i', and 'l' codes).  Future versions of Python will
  raise a TypeError.
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Tests
-----

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- Several tests weren't being run from regrtest.py (test_timeout.py,
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  test_tarfile.py, test_netrc.py, test_multifile.py,
  test_importhooks.py and test_imp.py).  Now they are.  (Note to
  developers: please read Lib/test/README when creating a new test, to
  make sure to do it right!  All tests need to use either unittest or
  pydoc.)

- Added test_posix.py, a test suite for the posix module.

- Added test_hexoct.py, a test suite for hex/oct constant folding.
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Windows
-------

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- The timeout code for socket connect() didn't work right; this has
  now been fixed.  test_timeout.py should pass (at least most of the
  time).

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- distutils' msvccompiler class now passes the preprocessor options to
  the resource compiler.  See SF patch #669198.

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- The bsddb module now ships with Sleepycat's 4.1.25.NC, the latest
  release without strong cryptography.

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- sys.path[0], if it contains a directory name, is now always an
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  absolute pathname. (SF patch #664376.)
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- The new logging package is now installed by the Windows installer.  It
  wasn't in 2.3a1 due to oversight.

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Mac
---

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- There are new dialogs EasyDialogs.AskFileForOpen, AskFileForSave
  and AskFolder. The old macfs.StandardGetFile and friends are deprecated.
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- Most of the standard library now uses pathnames or FSRefs in preference
  of FSSpecs, and use the underlying Carbon.File and Carbon.Folder modules
  in stead of macfs. macfs will probably be deprecated in the future.
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- Type Carbon.File.FSCatalogInfo and supporting methods have been implemented.
  This also makes macfs.FSSpec.SetDates() work again.
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- There is a new module pimp, the package install manager for Python, and
  accompanying applet PackageManager. These allow you to easily download
  and install pretested extension packages either in source or binary
  form. Only in MacPython-OSX.
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- Applets are now built with bundlebuilder in MacPython-OSX, which should make
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  them more robust and also provides a path towards BuildApplication. The
  downside of this change is that applets can no longer be run from the
  Terminal window, this will hopefully be fixed in the 2.3b1.
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What's New in Python 2.3 alpha 1?
=================================

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*Release date: 31-Dec-2002*
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Type/class unification and new-style classes
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--------------------------------------------
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- One can now assign to __bases__ and __name__ of new-style classes.

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- dict() now accepts keyword arguments so that dict(one=1, two=2)
  is the equivalent of {"one": 1, "two": 2}.  Accordingly,
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  the existing (but undocumented) 'items' keyword argument has
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  been eliminated.  This means that dict(items=someMapping) now has
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  a different meaning than before.

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- int() now returns a long object if the argument is outside the
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  integer range, so int("4" * 1000), int(1e200) and int(1L<<1000) will
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  all return long objects instead of raising an OverflowError.
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- Assignment to __class__ is disallowed if either the old or the new
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  class is a statically allocated type object (such as defined by an
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  extension module).  This prevents anomalies like 2.__class__ = bool.
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- New-style object creation and deallocation have been sped up
  significantly; they are now faster than classic instance creation
  and deallocation.

- The __slots__ variable can now mention "private" names, and the
  right thing will happen (e.g. __slots__ = ["__foo"]).

- The built-ins slice() and buffer() are now callable types.  The
  types classobj (formerly class), code, function, instance, and
  instancemethod (formerly instance-method), which have no built-in
  names but are accessible through the types module, are now also
  callable.  The type dict-proxy is renamed to dictproxy.

- Cycles going through the __class__ link of a new-style instance are
  now detected by the garbage collector.

- Classes using __slots__ are now properly garbage collected.
  [SF bug 519621]

- Tightened the __slots__ rules: a slot name must be a valid Python
  identifier.

- The constructor for the module type now requires a name argument and
  takes an optional docstring argument.  Previously, this constructor
  ignored its arguments.  As a consequence, deriving a class from a
  module (not from the module type) is now illegal; previously this
  created an unnamed module, just like invoking the module type did.
  [SF bug 563060]

- A new type object, 'basestring', is added.  This is a common base type
  for 'str' and 'unicode', and can be used instead of
  types.StringTypes, e.g. to test whether something is "a string":
  isinstance(x, basestring) is True for Unicode and 8-bit strings.  This
  is an abstract base class and cannot be instantiated directly.

- Changed new-style class instantiation so that when C's __new__
  method returns something that's not a C instance, its __init__ is
  not called.  [SF bug #537450]

- Fixed super() to work correctly with class methods.  [SF bug #535444]

- If you try to pickle an instance of a class that has __slots__ but
  doesn't define or override __getstate__, a TypeError is now raised.
  This is done by adding a bozo __getstate__ to the class that always
  raises TypeError.  (Before, this would appear to be pickled, but the
  state of the slots would be lost.)

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Core and builtins
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-----------------
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2001
- Import from zipfiles is now supported.  The name of a zipfile placed
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  on sys.path causes the import statement to look for importable Python
  modules (with .py, pyc and .pyo extensions) and packages inside the
  zipfile.  The zipfile import follows the specification (though not
  the sample implementation) of PEP 273.  The semantics of __path__ are
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  compatible with those that have been implemented in Jython since
  Jython 2.1.

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2009
- PEP 302 has been accepted.  Although it was initially developed to
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  support zipimport, it offers a new, general import hook mechanism.
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  Several new variables have been added to the sys module:
  sys.meta_path, sys.path_hooks, and sys.path_importer_cache; these
  make extending the import statement much more convenient than
  overriding the __import__ built-in function.  For a description of
  these, see PEP 302.

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- A frame object's f_lineno attribute can now be written to from a
  trace function to change which line will execute next.  A command to
  exploit this from pdb has been added.  [SF patch #643835]

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- The _codecs support module for codecs.py was turned into a builtin
  module to assure that at least the builtin codecs are available
  to the Python parser for source code decoding according to PEP 263.

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- issubclass now supports a tuple as the second argument, just like
  isinstance does. ``issubclass(X, (A, B))`` is equivalent to
  ``issubclass(X, A) or issubclass(X, B)``.

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- Thanks to Armin Rigo, the last known way to provoke a system crash
  by cleverly arranging for a comparison function to mutate a list
  during a list.sort() operation has been fixed.  The effect of
  attempting to mutate a list, or even to inspect its contents or
  length, while a sort is in progress, is not defined by the language.
  The C implementation of Python 2.3 attempts to detect mutations,
  and raise ValueError if one occurs, but there's no guarantee that
  all mutations will be caught, or that any will be caught across
  releases or implementations.

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- Unicode file name processing for Windows (PEP 277) is implemented.
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  All platforms now have an os.path.supports_unicode_filenames attribute,
  which is set to True on Windows NT/2000/XP, and False elsewhere.
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- Codec error handling callbacks (PEP 293) are implemented.
  Error handling in unicode.encode or str.decode can now be customized.

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- A subtle change to the semantics of the built-in function intern():
  interned strings are no longer immortal.  You must keep a reference
  to the return value intern() around to get the benefit.

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- Use of 'None' as a variable, argument or attribute name now
  issues a SyntaxWarning.  In the future, None may become a keyword.

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- SET_LINENO is gone.  co_lnotab is now consulted to determine when to
  call the trace function.  C code that accessed f_lineno should call
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  PyCode_Addr2Line instead (f_lineno is still there, but only kept up
  to date when there is a trace function set).
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- There's a new warning category, FutureWarning.  This is used to warn
  about a number of situations where the value or sign of an integer
  result will change in Python 2.4 as a result of PEP 237 (integer
  unification).  The warnings implement stage B0 mentioned in that
  PEP.  The warnings are about the following situations:

    - Octal and hex literals without 'L' prefix in the inclusive range
      [0x80000000..0xffffffff]; these are currently negative ints, but
      in Python 2.4 they will be positive longs with the same bit
      pattern.

    - Left shifts on integer values that cause the outcome to lose
      bits or have a different sign than the left operand.  To be
      precise: x<<n where this currently doesn't yield the same value
      as long(x)<<n; in Python 2.4, the outcome will be long(x)<<n.

    - Conversions from ints to string that show negative values as
      unsigned ints in the inclusive range [0x80000000..0xffffffff];
      this affects the functions hex() and oct(), and the string
      formatting codes %u, %o, %x, and %X.  In Python 2.4, these will
      show signed values (e.g. hex(-1) currently returns "0xffffffff";
      in Python 2.4 it will return "-0x1").

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- The bits manipulated under the cover by sys.setcheckinterval() have
  been changed.  Both the check interval and the ticker used to be
  per-thread values.  They are now just a pair of global variables.
  In addition, the default check interval was boosted from 10 to 100
  bytecode instructions.  This may have some effect on systems that
  relied on the old default value.  In particular, in multi-threaded
  applications which try to be highly responsive, response time will
  increase by some (perhaps imperceptible) amount.
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- When multiplying very large integers, a version of the so-called
  Karatsuba algorithm is now used.  This is most effective if the
  inputs have roughly the same size.  If they both have about N digits,
  Karatsuba multiplication has O(N**1.58) runtime (the exponent is
  log_base_2(3)) instead of the previous O(N**2).  Measured results may
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  be better or worse than that, depending on platform quirks.  Besides
  the O() improvement in raw instruction count, the Karatsuba algorithm
  appears to have much better cache behavior on extremely large integers
  (starting in the ballpark of a million bits).  Note that this is a
  simple implementation, and there's no intent here to compete with,
  e.g., GMP.  It gives a very nice speedup when it applies, but a package
  devoted to fast large-integer arithmetic should run circles around it.
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- u'%c' will now raise a ValueError in case the argument is an
  integer outside the valid range of Unicode code point ordinals.

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- The tempfile module has been overhauled for enhanced security.  The
  mktemp() function is now deprecated; new, safe replacements are
  mkstemp() (for files) and mkdtemp() (for directories), and the
  higher-level functions NamedTemporaryFile() and TemporaryFile().
  Use of some global variables in this module is also deprecated; the
  new functions have keyword arguments to provide the same
  functionality.  All Lib, Tools and Demo modules that used the unsafe
  interfaces have been updated to use the safe replacements.  Thanks
  to Zack Weinberg!

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- When x is an object whose class implements __mul__ and __rmul__,
  1.0*x would correctly invoke __rmul__, but 1*x would erroneously
  invoke __mul__.  This was due to the sequence-repeat code in the int
  type.  This has been fixed now.

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- Previously, "str1 in str2" required str1 to be a string of length 1.
  This restriction has been relaxed to allow str1 to be a string of
  any length.  Thus "'el' in 'hello world'" returns True now.

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- File objects are now their own iterators.  For a file f, iter(f) now
  returns f (unless f is closed), and f.next() is similar to
  f.readline() when EOF is not reached; however, f.next() uses a
  readahead buffer that messes up the file position, so mixing
  f.next() and f.readline() (or other methods) doesn't work right.
  Calling f.seek() drops the readahead buffer, but other operations
  don't.  It so happens that this gives a nice additional speed boost
  to "for line in file:"; the xreadlines method and corresponding
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  module are now obsolete.  Thanks to Oren Tirosh!
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- Encoding declarations (PEP 263, phase 1) have been implemented.  A
  comment of the form "# -*- coding: <encodingname> -*-" in the first
  or second line of a Python source file indicates the encoding.
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- list.sort() has a new implementation.  While cross-platform results
  may vary, and in data-dependent ways, this is much faster on many
  kinds of partially ordered lists than the previous implementation,
  and reported to be just as fast on randomly ordered lists on
  several major platforms.  This sort is also stable (if A==B and A
  precedes B in the list at the start, A precedes B after the sort too),
  although the language definition does not guarantee stability.  A
  potential drawback is that list.sort() may require temp space of
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  len(list)*2 bytes (``*4`` on a 64-bit machine).  It's therefore possible
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  for list.sort() to raise MemoryError now, even if a comparison function
  does not.  See <http://www.python.org/sf/587076> for full details.

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- All standard iterators now ensure that, once StopIteration has been
  raised, all future calls to next() on the same iterator will also
  raise StopIteration.  There used to be various counterexamples to
  this behavior, which could caused confusion or subtle program
  breakage, without any benefits.  (Note that this is still an
  iterator's responsibility; the iterator framework does not enforce
  this.)

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- Ctrl+C handling on Windows has been made more consistent with
  other platforms.  KeyboardInterrupt can now reliably be caught,
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  and Ctrl+C at an interactive prompt no longer terminates the
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  process under NT/2k/XP (it never did under Win9x).  Ctrl+C will
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  interrupt time.sleep() in the main thread, and any child processes
  created via the popen family (on win2k; we can't make win9x work
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  reliably) are also interrupted (as generally happens on for Linux/Unix.)
  [SF bugs 231273, 439992 and 581232]
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- sys.getwindowsversion() has been added on Windows.  This
  returns a tuple with information about the version of Windows
  currently running.

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- Slices and repetitions of buffer objects now consistently return
  a string.  Formerly, strings would be returned most of the time,
  but a buffer object would be returned when the repetition count
  was one or when the slice range was all inclusive.

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- Unicode objects in sys.path are no longer ignored but treated
  as directory names.

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- Fixed string.startswith and string.endswith builtin methods
  so they accept negative indices.  [SF bug 493951]

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- Fixed a bug with a continue inside a try block and a yield in the
  finally clause.  [SF bug 567538]

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- Most builtin sequences now support "extended slices", i.e. slices
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  with a third "stride" parameter.  For example, "hello world"[::-1]
  gives "dlrow olleh".
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- A new warning PendingDeprecationWarning was added to provide
  direction on features which are in the process of being deprecated.
  The warning will not be printed by default.  To see the pending
  deprecations, use -Walways::PendingDeprecationWarning::
  as a command line option or warnings.filterwarnings() in code.

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- Deprecated features of xrange objects have been removed as
  promised.  The start, stop, and step attributes and the tolist()
  method no longer exist.  xrange repetition and slicing have been
  removed.

2201 2202 2203 2204
- New builtin function enumerate(x), from PEP 279.  Example:
  enumerate("abc") is an iterator returning (0,"a"), (1,"b"), (2,"c").
  The argument can be an arbitrary iterable object.

2205 2206 2207 2208
- The assert statement no longer tests __debug__ at runtime.  This means
  that assert statements cannot be disabled by assigning a false value
  to __debug__.

2209 2210 2211 2212
- A method zfill() was added to str and unicode, that fills a numeric
  string to the left with zeros.  For example,
  "+123".zfill(6) -> "+00123".

2213 2214 2215 2216
- Complex numbers supported divmod() and the // and % operators, but
  these make no sense.  Since this was documented, they're being
  deprecated now.

2217 2218 2219
- String and unicode methods lstrip(), rstrip() and strip() now take
  an optional argument that specifies the characters to strip.  For
  example, "Foo!!!?!?!?".rstrip("?!") -> "Foo".
Guido van Rossum's avatar
Guido van Rossum committed
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2221 2222 2223 2224 2225
- There's a new dictionary constructor (a class method of the dict
  class), dict.fromkeys(iterable, value=None).  It constructs a
  dictionary with keys taken from the iterable and all values set to a
  single value.  It can be used for building sets and for removing
  duplicates from sequences.
2226

Guido van Rossum's avatar
Guido van Rossum committed
2227 2228 2229
- Added a new dict method pop(key).  This removes and returns the
  value corresponding to key.  [SF patch #539949]

Guido van Rossum's avatar
Guido van Rossum committed
2230 2231 2232
- A new built-in type, bool, has been added, as well as built-in
  names for its two values, True and False.  Comparisons and sundry
  other operations that return a truth value have been changed to
Andrew M. Kuchling's avatar
Andrew M. Kuchling committed
2233
  return a bool instead.  Read PEP 285 for an explanation of why this
Guido van Rossum's avatar
Guido van Rossum committed
2234 2235
  is backward compatible.

Guido van Rossum's avatar
Guido van Rossum committed
2236 2237 2238 2239 2240 2241
- Fixed two bugs reported as SF #535905: under certain conditions,
  deallocating a deeply nested structure could cause a segfault in the
  garbage collector, due to interaction with the "trashcan" code;
  access to the current frame during destruction of a local variable
  could access a pointer to freed memory.

Guido van Rossum's avatar
Guido van Rossum committed
2242 2243 2244 2245 2246 2247
- The optional object allocator ("pymalloc") has been enabled by
  default.  The recommended practice for memory allocation and
  deallocation has been streamlined.  A header file is included,
  Misc/pymemcompat.h, which can be bundled with 3rd party extensions
  and lets them use the same API with Python versions from 1.5.2
  onwards.
2248

2249 2250 2251
- PyErr_Display will provide file and line information for all exceptions
  that have an attribute print_file_and_line, not just SyntaxErrors.

2252 2253 2254
- The UTF-8 codec will now encode and decode Unicode surrogates
  correctly and without raising exceptions for unpaired ones.

2255 2256 2257 2258 2259 2260
- Universal newlines (PEP 278) is implemented.  Briefly, using 'U'
  instead of 'r' when opening a text file for reading changes the line
  ending convention so that any of '\r', '\r\n', and '\n' is
  recognized (even mixed in one file); all three are converted to
  '\n', the standard Python line end character.

2261 2262 2263 2264
- file.xreadlines() now raises a ValueError if the file is closed:
  Previously, an xreadlines object was returned which would raise
  a ValueError when the xreadlines.next() method was called.

Andrew M. Kuchling's avatar
Andrew M. Kuchling committed
2265
- sys.exit() inadvertently allowed more than one argument.
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  An exception will now be raised if more than one argument is used.

2268 2269 2270
- Changed evaluation order of dictionary literals to conform to the
  general left to right evaluation order rule. Now {f1(): f2()} will
  evaluate f1 first.
Gustavo Niemeyer's avatar
Gustavo Niemeyer committed
2271

Gustavo Niemeyer's avatar
Gustavo Niemeyer committed
2272 2273 2274
- Fixed bug #521782: when a file was in non-blocking mode, file.read()
  could silently lose data or wrongly throw an unknown error.

2275 2276 2277 2278
- The sq_repeat, sq_inplace_repeat, sq_concat and sq_inplace_concat
  slots are now always tried after trying the corresponding nb_* slots.
  This fixes a number of minor bugs (see bug #624807).

Neal Norwitz's avatar
Neal Norwitz committed
2279 2280
- Fix problem with dynamic loading on 64-bit AIX (see bug #639945).

Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
2281
Extension modules
2282
-----------------
Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
2283

2284 2285 2286 2287 2288
- Added three operators to the operator module:
    operator.pow(a,b) which is equivalent to:  a**b.
    operator.is_(a,b) which is equivalent to:  a is b.
    operator.is_not(a,b) which is equivalent to:  a is not b.

2289 2290
- posix.openpty now works on all systems that have /dev/ptmx.

Guido van Rossum's avatar
Guido van Rossum committed
2291 2292 2293
- A module zipimport exists to support importing code from zip
  archives.

Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
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- The new datetime module supplies classes for manipulating dates and
  times.  The basic design came from the Zope "fishbowl process", and
  favors practical commercial applications over calendar esoterica.  See

      http://www.zope.org/Members/fdrake/DateTimeWiki/FrontPage

2300 2301 2302
- _tkinter now returns Tcl objects, instead of strings. Objects which
  have Python equivalents are converted to Python objects, other objects
  are wrapped. This can be configured through the wantobjects method,
2303
  or Tkinter.wantobjects.
2304

2305 2306 2307 2308
- The PyBSDDB wrapper around the Sleepycat Berkeley DB library has
  been added as the package bsddb.  The traditional bsddb module is
  still available in source code, but not built automatically anymore,
  and is now named bsddb185.  This supports Berkeley DB versions from
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  3.0 to 4.1.  For help converting your databases from the old module (which
  probably used an obsolete version of Berkeley DB) to the new module, see
  the db2pickle.py and pickle2db.py scripts described in the Tools/Demos
  section above.
Martin v. Löwis's avatar
Martin v. Löwis committed
2313

2314 2315
- unicodedata was updated to Unicode 3.2. It supports normalization
  and names for Hangul syllables and CJK unified ideographs.
2316

2317 2318
- resource.getrlimit() now returns longs instead of ints.

Martin v. Löwis's avatar
Martin v. Löwis committed
2319 2320 2321
- readline now dynamically adjusts its input/output stream if
  sys.stdin/stdout changes.

2322 2323 2324 2325
- The _tkinter module (and hence Tkinter) has dropped support for
  Tcl/Tk 8.0 and 8.1.  Only Tcl/Tk versions 8.2, 8.3 and 8.4 are
  supported.

2326 2327
- cPickle.BadPickleGet is now a class.

2328 2329
- The time stamps in os.stat_result are floating point numbers
  after stat_float_times has been called.
2330

2331 2332 2333
- If the size passed to mmap.mmap() is larger than the length of the
  file on non-Windows platforms, a ValueError is raised. [SF bug 585792]

2334 2335
- The xreadlines module is slated for obsolescence.

2336 2337 2338
- The strptime function in the time module is now always available (a
  Python implementation is used when the C library doesn't define it).

2339 2340 2341 2342
- The 'new' module is no longer an extension, but a Python module that
  only exists for backwards compatibility.  Its contents are no longer
  functions but callable type objects.

2343
- The bsddb.*open functions can now take 'None' as a filename.
2344
  This will create a temporary in-memory bsddb that won't be
2345
  written to disk.
2346

Martin v. Löwis's avatar
Martin v. Löwis committed
2347 2348
- posix.getloadavg, posix.lchown, posix.killpg, posix.mknod, and
  posix.getpgid have been added where available.
2349

2350 2351
- The locale module now exposes the C library's gettext interface. It
  also has a new function getpreferredencoding.
2352

Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
2353 2354 2355 2356 2357
- A security hole ("double free") was found in zlib-1.1.3, a popular
  third party compression library used by some Python modules.  The
  hole was quickly plugged in zlib-1.1.4, and the Windows build of
  Python now ships with zlib-1.1.4.

2358 2359
- pwd, grp, and resource return enhanced tuples now, with symbolic
  field names.
2360

2361 2362 2363 2364 2365
- array.array is now a type object. A new format character
  'u' indicates Py_UNICODE arrays. For those, .tounicode and
  .fromunicode methods are available. Arrays now support __iadd__
  and __imul__.

Neal Norwitz's avatar
Neal Norwitz committed
2366
- dl now builds on every system that has dlfcn.h.  Failure in case
2367 2368 2369
  of sizeof(int)!=sizeof(long)!=sizeof(void*) is delayed until dl.open
  is called.

2370 2371 2372 2373
- The sys module acquired a new attribute, api_version, which evaluates
  to the value of the PYTHON_API_VERSION macro with which the
  interpreter was compiled.

2374 2375 2376
- Fixed bug #470582: sre module would return a tuple (None, 'a', 'ab')
  when applying the regular expression '^((a)c)?(ab)$' on 'ab'. It now
  returns (None, None, 'ab'), as expected. Also fixed handling of
2377
  lastindex/lastgroup match attributes in similar cases. For example,
2378 2379 2380
  when running the expression r'(a)(b)?b' over 'ab', lastindex must be
  1, not 2.

2381 2382 2383 2384 2385
- Fixed bug #581080: sre scanner was not checking the buffer limit
  before increasing the current pointer. This was creating an infinite
  loop in the search function, once the pointer exceeded the buffer
  limit.

2386 2387 2388 2389
- The os.fdopen function now enforces a file mode starting with the
  letter 'r', 'w' or 'a', otherwise a ValueError is raised. This fixes
  bug #623464.

Greg Ward's avatar
Greg Ward committed
2390 2391 2392 2393 2394
- The linuxaudiodev module is now deprecated; it is being replaced by
  ossaudiodev.  The interface has been extended to cover a lot more of
  OSS (see www.opensound.com), including most DSP ioctls and the
  OSS mixer API.  Documentation forthcoming in 2.3a2.

Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
2395
Library
2396
-------
Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
2397

2398 2399
- imaplib.py now supports SSL (Tino Lange and Piers Lauder).

2400 2401 2402 2403 2404
- Freeze's modulefinder.py has been moved to the standard library;
  slightly improved so it will issue less false missing submodule
  reports (see sf path #643711 for details).  Documentation will follow
  with Python 2.3a2.

2405 2406
- os.path exposes getctime.

2407
- unittest.py now has two additional methods called assertAlmostEqual()
Raymond Hettinger's avatar
Raymond Hettinger committed
2408
  and failIfAlmostEqual().  They implement an approximate comparison
2409
  by rounding the difference between the two arguments and comparing
Raymond Hettinger's avatar
Raymond Hettinger committed
2410
  the result to zero.  Approximate comparison is essential for
2411 2412
  unit tests of floating point results.

2413 2414 2415 2416
- calendar.py now depends on the new datetime module rather than
  the time module.  As a result, the range of allowable dates
  has been increased.

2417 2418 2419
- pdb has a new 'j(ump)' command to select the next line to be
  executed.

2420 2421 2422
- The distutils created windows installers now can run a
  postinstallation script.

2423 2424 2425
- doctest.testmod can now be called without argument, which means to
  test the current module.

Raymond Hettinger's avatar
Raymond Hettinger committed
2426
- When canceling a server that implemented threading with a keyboard
2427 2428 2429 2430 2431
  interrupt, the server would shut down but not terminate (waiting on
  client threads). A new member variable, daemon_threads, was added to
  the ThreadingMixIn class in SocketServer.py to make it explicit that
  this behavior needs to be controlled.

Guido van Rossum's avatar
Guido van Rossum committed
2432
- A new module, optparse, provides a fancy alternative to getopt for
Andrew M. Kuchling's avatar
Andrew M. Kuchling committed
2433
  command line parsing.  It is a slightly modified version of Greg
Guido van Rossum's avatar
Guido van Rossum committed
2434 2435
  Ward's Optik package.

2436 2437 2438 2439 2440 2441 2442
- UserDict.py now defines a DictMixin class which defines all dictionary
  methods for classes that already have a minimum mapping interface.
  This greatly simplifies writing classes that need to be substitutable
  for dictionaries (such as the shelve module).

- shelve.py now subclasses from UserDict.DictMixin.  Now shelve supports
  all dictionary methods.  This eases the transition to persistent
Andrew M. Kuchling's avatar
Andrew M. Kuchling committed
2443
  storage for scripts originally written with dictionaries in mind.
2444

2445 2446 2447 2448
- shelve.open and the various classes in shelve.py now accept an optional
  binary flag, which defaults to False.  If True, the values stored in the
  shelf are binary pickles.

2449 2450 2451
- A new package, logging, implements the logging API defined by PEP
  282.  The code is written by Vinay Sajip.

2452 2453 2454
- StreamReader, StreamReaderWriter and StreamRecoder in the codecs
  modules are iterators now.

2455 2456 2457 2458 2459 2460
- gzip.py now handles files exceeding 2GB.  Files over 4GB also work
  now (provided the OS supports it, and Python is configured with large
  file support), but in that case the underlying gzip file format can
  record only the least-significant 32 bits of the file size, so that
  some tools working with gzipped files may report an incorrect file
  size.
2461

2462 2463 2464
- xml.sax.saxutils.unescape has been added, to replace entity references
  with their entity value.

2465 2466
- Queue.Queue.{put,get} now support an optional timeout argument.

2467 2468
- Various features of Tk 8.4 are exposed in Tkinter.py. The multiple
  option of tkFileDialog is exposed as function askopenfile{,name}s.
2469

2470 2471
- Various configure methods of Tkinter have been stream-lined, so that
  tag_configure, image_configure, window_configure now return a
2472
  dictionary when invoked with no argument.
2473

2474 2475 2476 2477 2478 2479 2480 2481 2482 2483 2484
- Importing the readline module now no longer has the side effect of
  calling setlocale(LC_CTYPE, "").  The initial "C" locale, or
  whatever locale is explicitly set by the user, is preserved.  If you
  want repr() of 8-bit strings in your preferred encoding to preserve
  all printable characters of that encoding, you have to add the
  following code to your $PYTHONSTARTUP file or to your application's
  main():

    import locale
    locale.setlocale(locale.LC_CTYPE, "")

2485 2486 2487
- shutil.move was added. shutil.copytree now reports errors as an
  exception at the end, instead of printing error messages.

2488 2489 2490 2491 2492 2493
- Encoding name normalization was generalized to not only
  replace hyphens with underscores, but also all other non-alphanumeric
  characters (with the exception of the dot which is used for Python
  package names during lookup). The aliases.py mapping was updated
  to the new standard.

2494 2495 2496 2497 2498
- mimetypes has two new functions: guess_all_extensions() which
  returns a list of all known extensions for a mime type, and
  add_type() which adds one mapping between a mime type and
  an extension to the database.

2499 2500 2501 2502
- New module: sets, defines the class Set that implements a mutable
  set type using the keys of a dict to represent the set.  There's
  also a class ImmutableSet which is useful when you need sets of sets
  or when you need to use sets as dict keys, and a class BaseSet which
2503
  is the base class of the two.
2504

2505
- Added random.sample(population,k) for random sampling without replacement.
2506
  Returns a k length list of unique elements chosen from the population.
2507

2508 2509 2510 2511 2512
- random.randrange(-sys.maxint-1, sys.maxint) no longer raises
  OverflowError.  That is, it now accepts any combination of 'start'
  and 'stop' arguments so long as each is in the range of Python's
  bounded integers.

2513 2514 2515 2516 2517 2518 2519 2520 2521 2522 2523 2524 2525 2526 2527 2528 2529 2530 2531
- Thanks to Raymond Hettinger, random.random() now uses a new core
  generator.  The Mersenne Twister algorithm is implemented in C,
  threadsafe, faster than the previous generator, has an astronomically
  large period (2**19937-1), creates random floats to full 53-bit
  precision, and may be the most widely tested random number generator
  in existence.

  The random.jumpahead(n) method has different semantics for the new
  generator.  Instead of jumping n steps ahead, it uses n and the
  existing state to create a new state.  This means that jumpahead()
  continues to support multi-threaded code needing generators of
  non-overlapping sequences.  However, it will break code which relies
  on jumpahead moving a specific number of steps forward.

  The attributes random.whseed and random.__whseed have no meaning for
  the new generator.  Code using these attributes should switch to a
  new class, random.WichmannHill which is provided for backward
  compatibility and to make an alternate generator available.

2532 2533 2534 2535
- New "algorithms" module: heapq, implements a heap queue.  Thanks to
  Kevin O'Connor for the code and François Pinard for an entertaining
  write-up explaining the theory and practical uses of heaps.

Marc-André Lemburg's avatar
Marc-André Lemburg committed
2536 2537
- New encoding for the Palm OS character set: palmos.

2538 2539 2540 2541 2542
- binascii.crc32() and the zipfile module had problems on some 64-bit
  platforms.  These have been fixed.  On a platform with 8-byte C longs,
  crc32() now returns a signed-extended 4-byte result, so that its value
  as a Python int is equal to the value computed a 32-bit platform.

2543 2544 2545
- xml.dom.minidom.toxml and toprettyxml now take an optional encoding
  argument.

Guido van Rossum's avatar
Guido van Rossum committed
2546 2547 2548 2549 2550 2551
- Some fixes in the copy module: when an object is copied through its
  __reduce__ method, there was no check for a __setstate__ method on
  the result [SF patch 565085]; deepcopy should treat instances of
  custom metaclasses the same way it treats instances of type 'type'
  [SF patch 560794].

2552 2553 2554
- Sockets now support timeout mode.  After s.settimeout(T), where T is
  a float expressing seconds, subsequent operations raise an exception
  if they cannot be completed within T seconds.  To disable timeout
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  mode, use s.settimeout(None).  There's also a module function,
  socket.setdefaulttimeout(T), which sets the default for all sockets
  created henceforth.
2558 2559 2560

- getopt.gnu_getopt was added.  This supports GNU-style option
  processing, where options can be mixed with non-option arguments.
2561

Michael W. Hudson's avatar
Michael W. Hudson committed
2562 2563 2564 2565
- Stop using strings for exceptions.  String objects used for
  exceptions are now classes deriving from Exception.  The objects
  changed were: Tkinter.TclError, bdb.BdbQuit, macpath.norm_error,
  tabnanny.NannyNag, and xdrlib.Error.
2566

2567 2568 2569 2570 2571 2572
- Constants BOM_UTF8, BOM_UTF16, BOM_UTF16_LE, BOM_UTF16_BE,
  BOM_UTF32, BOM_UTF32_LE and BOM_UTF32_BE that represent the Byte
  Order Mark in UTF-8, UTF-16 and UTF-32 encodings for little and
  big endian systems were added to the codecs module. The old names
  BOM32_* and BOM64_* were off by a factor of 2.

2573
- Added conversion functions math.degrees() and math.radians().
2574

2575 2576
- math.log() now takes an optional argument:  math.log(x[, base]).

2577 2578 2579 2580 2581 2582 2583
- ftplib.retrlines() now tests for callback is None rather than testing
  for False.  Was causing an error when given a callback object which
  was callable but also returned len() as zero.  The change may
  create new breakage if the caller relied on the undocumented behavior
  and called with callback set to [] or some other False value not
  identical to None.

2584 2585 2586 2587 2588 2589 2590
- random.gauss() uses a piece of hidden state used by nothing else,
  and the .seed() and .whseed() methods failed to reset it.  In other
  words, setting the seed didn't completely determine the sequence of
  results produced by random.gauss().  It does now.  Programs repeatedly
  mixing calls to a seed method with calls to gauss() may see different
  results now.

2591 2592 2593
- The pickle.Pickler class grew a clear_memo() method to mimic that
  provided by cPickle.Pickler.

2594 2595 2596 2597 2598 2599 2600 2601 2602
- difflib's SequenceMatcher class now does a dynamic analysis of
  which elements are so frequent as to constitute noise.  For
  comparing files as sequences of lines, this generally works better
  than the IS_LINE_JUNK function, and function ndiff's linejunk
  argument defaults to None now as a result.  A happy benefit is
  that SequenceMatcher may run much faster now when applied
  to large files with many duplicate lines (for example, C program
  text with lots of repeated "}" and "return NULL;" lines).

2603 2604
- New Text.dump() method in Tkinter module.

2605 2606 2607 2608 2609 2610 2611 2612 2613
- New distutils commands for building packagers were added to
  support pkgtool on Solaris and swinstall on HP-UX.

- distutils now has a new abstract binary packager base class
  command/bdist_packager, which simplifies writing packagers.
  This will hopefully provide the missing bits to encourage
  people to submit more packagers, e.g. for Debian, FreeBSD
  and other systems.

2614 2615 2616 2617
- The UTF-16, -LE and -BE stream readers now raise a
  NotImplementedError for all calls to .readline(). Previously, they
  used to just produce garbage or fail with an encoding error --
  UTF-16 is a 2-byte encoding and the C lib's line reading APIs don't
2618 2619
  work well with these.

2620 2621
- compileall now supports quiet operation.

Andrew M. Kuchling's avatar
Andrew M. Kuchling committed
2622
- The BaseHTTPServer now implements optional HTTP/1.1 persistent
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  connections.

2625 2626 2627 2628
- socket module: the SSL support was broken out of the main
  _socket module C helper and placed into a new _ssl helper
  which now gets imported by socket.py if available and working.

2629 2630 2631
- encodings package: added aliases for all supported IANA character
  sets

2632 2633 2634 2635
- ftplib: to safeguard the user's privacy, anonymous login will use
  "anonymous@" as default password, rather than the real user and host
  name.

2636 2637 2638 2639
- webbrowser: tightened up the command passed to os.system() so that
  arbitrary shell code can't be executed because a bogus URL was
  passed in.

2640
- gettext.translation has an optional fallback argument, and
2641
  gettext.find an optional all argument. Translations will now fallback
2642 2643
  on a per-message basis. The module supports plural forms, by means
  of gettext.[d]ngettext and Translation.[u]ngettext.
2644

2645 2646
- distutils bdist commands now offer a --skip-build option.

Walter Dörwald's avatar
Walter Dörwald committed
2647 2648
- warnings.warn now accepts a Warning instance as first argument.

2649 2650 2651 2652
- The xml.sax.expatreader.ExpatParser class will no longer create
  circular references by using itself as the locator that gets passed
  to the content handler implementation.  [SF bug #535474]

2653 2654 2655 2656
- The email.Parser.Parser class now properly parses strings regardless
  of their line endings, which can be any of \r, \n, or \r\n (CR, LF,
  or CRLF).  Also, the Header class's constructor default arguments
  has changed slightly so that an explicit maxlinelen value is always
Barry Warsaw's avatar
Barry Warsaw committed
2657
  honored, and so unicode conversion error handling can be specified.
2658

David Goodger's avatar
David Goodger committed
2659
- distutils' build_ext command now links C++ extensions with the C++
2660
  compiler available in the Makefile or CXX environment variable, if
David Goodger's avatar
David Goodger committed
2661
  running under \*nix.
2662 2663 2664 2665 2666

- New module bz2: provides a comprehensive interface for the bz2 compression
  library.  It implements a complete file interface, one-shot (de)compression
  functions, and types for sequential (de)compression.

David Goodger's avatar
David Goodger committed
2667
- New pdb command 'pp' which is like 'p' except that it pretty-prints
2668 2669
  the value of its expression argument.

2670 2671 2672 2673
- Now bdist_rpm distutils command understands a verify_script option in
  the config file, including the contents of the referred filename in
  the "%verifyscript" section of the rpm spec file.

Gustavo Niemeyer's avatar
Gustavo Niemeyer committed
2674 2675 2676 2677
- Fixed bug #495695: webbrowser module would run graphic browsers in a
  unix environment even if DISPLAY was not set. Also, support for
  skipstone browser was included.

Gustavo Niemeyer's avatar
Gustavo Niemeyer committed
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- Fixed bug #636769: rexec would run unallowed code if subclasses of
  strings were used as parameters for certain functions.

Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
2681
Tools/Demos
2682
-----------
Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
2683

2684 2685 2686
- pygettext.py now supports globbing on Windows, and accepts module
  names in addition to accepting file names.

Guido van Rossum's avatar
Guido van Rossum committed
2687 2688 2689 2690 2691
- The SGI demos (Demo/sgi) have been removed.  Nobody thought they
  were interesting any more.  (The SGI library modules and extensions
  are still there; it is believed that at least some of these are
  still used and useful.)

Fred Drake's avatar
Fred Drake committed
2692 2693 2694 2695
- IDLE supports the new encoding declarations (PEP 263); it can also
  deal with legacy 8-bit files if they use the locale's encoding. It
  allows non-ASCII strings in the interactive shell and executes them
  in the locale's encoding.
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2697 2698 2699 2700
- freeze.py now produces binaries which can import shared modules,
  unlike before when this failed due to missing symbol exports in
  the generated binary.

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Build
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-----
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2704 2705
- On Unix, IDLE is now installed automatically.

2706 2707 2708
- The fpectl module is not built by default; it's dangerous or useless
  except in the hands of experts.

2709
- The public Python C API will generally be declared using PyAPI_FUNC
2710 2711 2712
  and PyAPI_DATA macros, while Python extension module init functions
  will be declared with PyMODINIT_FUNC.  DL_EXPORT/DL_IMPORT macros
  are deprecated.
2713

2714 2715 2716 2717 2718 2719 2720 2721
- A bug was fixed that could cause COUNT_ALLOCS builds to segfault, or
  get into infinite loops, when a new-style class got garbage-collected.
  Unfortunately, to avoid this, the way COUNT_ALLOCS works requires
  that new-style classes be immortal in COUNT_ALLOCS builds.  Note that
  COUNT_ALLOCS is not enabled by default, in either release or debug
  builds, and that new-style classes are immortal only in COUNT_ALLOCS
  builds.

2722 2723 2724 2725 2726 2727 2728 2729 2730
- Compiling out the cyclic garbage collector is no longer an option.
  The old symbol WITH_CYCLE_GC is now ignored, and Python.h arranges
  that it's always defined (for the benefit of any extension modules
  that may be conditionalizing on it).  A bonus is that any extension
  type participating in cyclic gc can choose to participate in the
  Py_TRASHCAN mechanism now too; in the absence of cyclic gc, this used
  to require editing the core to teach the trashcan mechanism about the
  new type.

2731
- According to Annex F of the current C standard,
2732 2733 2734 2735 2736 2737 2738 2739 2740 2741 2742 2743 2744 2745 2746 2747 2748

    The Standard C macro HUGE_VAL and its float and long double analogs,
    HUGE_VALF and HUGE_VALL, expand to expressions whose values are
    positive infinities.

  Python only uses the double HUGE_VAL, and only to #define its own symbol
  Py_HUGE_VAL.  Some platforms have incorrect definitions for HUGE_VAL.
  pyport.h used to try to worm around that, but the workarounds triggered
  other bugs on other platforms, so we gave up.  If your platform defines
  HUGE_VAL incorrectly, you'll need to #define Py_HUGE_VAL to something
  that works on your platform.  The only instance of this I'm sure about
  is on an unknown subset of Cray systems, described here:

  http://www.cray.com/swpubs/manuals/SN-2194_2.0/html-SN-2194_2.0/x3138.htm

  Presumably 2.3a1 breaks such systems.  If anyone uses such a system, help!

2749 2750 2751 2752
- The configure option --without-doc-strings can be used to remove the
  doc strings from the builtin functions and modules; this reduces the
  size of the executable.

2753 2754 2755 2756
- The universal newlines option (PEP 278) is on by default.  On Unix
  it can be disabled by passing --without-universal-newlines to the
  configure script.  On other platforms, remove
  WITH_UNIVERSAL_NEWLINES from pyconfig.h.
2757

2758 2759
- On Unix, a shared libpython2.3.so can be created with --enable-shared.

2760 2761 2762
- All uses of the CACHE_HASH, INTERN_STRINGS, and DONT_SHARE_SHORT_STRINGS
  preprocessor symbols were eliminated.  The internal decisions they
  controlled stopped being experimental long ago.
2763

2764 2765 2766
- The tools used to build the documentation now work under Cygwin as
  well as Unix.

2767 2768 2769 2770 2771
- The bsddb and dbm module builds have been changed to try and avoid version
  skew problems and disable linkage with Berkeley DB 1.85 unless the
  installer knows what s/he's doing.  See the section on building these
  modules in the README file for details.

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C API
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-----
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2775 2776
- PyNumber_Check() now returns true for string and unicode objects.
  This is a result of these types having a partially defined
2777
  tp_as_number slot.  (This is not a feature, but an indication that
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  PyNumber_Check() is not very useful to determine numeric behavior.
2779
  It may be deprecated.)
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2781 2782 2783 2784 2785 2786
- The string object's layout has changed: the pointer member
  ob_sinterned has been replaced by an int member ob_sstate.  On some
  platforms (e.g. most 64-bit systems) this may change the offset of
  the ob_sval member, so as a precaution the API_VERSION has been
  incremented.  The apparently unused feature of "indirect interned
  strings", supported by the ob_sinterned member, is gone.  Interned
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  strings are now usually mortal; there is a new API,
2788 2789 2790 2791 2792 2793
  PyString_InternImmortal() that creates immortal interned strings.
  (The ob_sstate member can only take three values; however, while
  making it a char saves a few bytes per string object on average, in
  it also slowed things down a bit because ob_sval was no longer
  aligned.)

2794 2795 2796 2797
- The Py_InitModule*() functions now accept NULL for the 'methods'
  argument.  Modules without global functions are becoming more common
  now that factories can be types rather than functions.

2798 2799 2800
- New C API PyUnicode_FromOrdinal() which exposes unichr() at C
  level.

2801 2802 2803 2804 2805 2806
- New functions PyErr_SetExcFromWindowsErr() and
  PyErr_SetExcFromWindowsErrWithFilename(). Similar to
  PyErr_SetFromWindowsErrWithFilename() and
  PyErr_SetFromWindowsErr(), but they allow to specify
  the exception type to raise. Available on Windows.

2807 2808 2809 2810
- Py_FatalError() is now declared as taking a const char* argument.  It
  was previously declared without const.  This should not affect working
  code.

2811 2812 2813 2814
- Added new macro PySequence_ITEM(o, i) that directly calls
  sq_item without rechecking that o is a sequence and without
  adjusting for negative indices.

2815 2816 2817 2818
- PyRange_New() now raises ValueError if the fourth argument is not 1.
  This is part of the removal of deprecated features of the xrange
  object.

2819 2820 2821 2822
- PyNumber_Coerce() and PyNumber_CoerceEx() now also invoke the type's
  coercion if both arguments have the same type but this type has the
  CHECKTYPES flag set.  This is to better support proxies.

2823 2824
- The type of tp_free has been changed from "``void (*)(PyObject *)``" to
  "``void (*)(void *)``".
2825 2826 2827

- PyObject_Del, PyObject_GC_Del are now functions instead of macros.

2828 2829 2830 2831 2832 2833 2834
- A type can now inherit its metatype from its base type.  Previously,
  when PyType_Ready() was called, if ob_type was found to be NULL, it
  was always set to &PyType_Type; now it is set to base->ob_type,
  where base is tp_base, defaulting to &PyObject_Type.

- PyType_Ready() accidentally did not inherit tp_is_gc; now it does.

2835
- The PyCore_* family of APIs have been removed.
2836

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- The "u#" parser marker will now pass through Unicode objects as-is
2838 2839
  without going through the buffer API.

2840
- The enumerators of cmp_op have been renamed to use the prefix ``PyCmp_``.
2841

2842 2843 2844 2845 2846
- An old #define of ANY as void has been removed from pyport.h.  This
  hasn't been used since Python's pre-ANSI days, and the #define has
  been marked as obsolete since then.  SF bug 495548 says it created
  conflicts with other packages, so keeping it around wasn't harmless.

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2847 2848 2849
- Because Python's magic number scheme broke on January 1st, we decided
  to stop Python development.  Thanks for all the fish!

2850
- Some of us don't like fish, so we changed Python's magic number
2851 2852
  scheme to a new one. See Python/import.c for details.

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2853
New platforms
2854
-------------
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2855

2856 2857
- OpenVMS is now supported.

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2858 2859
- AtheOS is now supported.

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2860 2861
- the EMX runtime environment on OS/2 is now supported.

2862 2863
- GNU/Hurd is now supported.

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Tests
2865 2866
-----

2867 2868 2869
- The regrtest.py script's -u option now provides a way to say "allow
  all resources except this one."  For example, to allow everything
  except bsddb, give the option '-uall,-bsddb'.
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2870 2871

Windows
2872
-------
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2874 2875 2876 2877 2878
- The Windows distribution now ships with version 4.0.14 of the
  Sleepycat Berkeley database library.  This should be a huge
  improvement over the previous Berkeley DB 1.85, which had many
  bugs.
  XXX What are the licensing issues here?
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  XXX If a user has a database created with a previous version of
2880 2881
  XXX     Python, what must they do to convert it?
  XXX I'm still not sure how to link this thing (see PCbuild/readme.txt).
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  XXX The version # is likely to change before 2.3a1.
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2883 2884

- The Windows distribution now ships with a Secure Sockets Library (SLL)
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   module (_ssl.pyd)
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2887 2888 2889
- The Windows distribution now ships with Tcl/Tk version 8.4.1 (it
  previously shipped with Tcl/Tk 8.3.2).

2890 2891
- When Python is built under a Microsoft compiler, sys.version now
  includes the compiler version number (_MSC_VER).  For example, under
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  MSVC 6, sys.version contains the substring "MSC v.1200 ".  1200 is
2893 2894
  the value of _MSC_VER under MSVC 6.

2895 2896 2897 2898
- Sometimes the uninstall executable (UNWISE.EXE) vanishes.  One cause
  of that has been fixed in the installer (disabled Wise's "delete in-
  use files" uninstall option).

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2899 2900
- Fixed a bug in urllib's proxy handling in Windows.  [SF bug #503031]

2901 2902 2903
- The installer now installs Start menu shortcuts under (the local
  equivalent of) "All Users" when doing an Admin install.

2904 2905 2906 2907
- file.truncate([newsize]) now works on Windows for all newsize values.
  It used to fail if newsize didn't fit in 32 bits, reflecting a
  limitation of MS _chsize (which is no longer used).

2908 2909 2910 2911 2912
- os.waitpid() is now implemented for Windows, and can be used to block
  until a specified process exits.  This is similar to, but not exactly
  the same as, os.waitpid() on POSIX systems.  If you're waiting for
  a specific process whose pid was obtained from one of the spawn()
  functions, the same Python os.waitpid() code works across platforms.
2913 2914 2915
  See the docs for details.  The docs were changed to clarify that
  spawn functions return, and waitpid requires, a process handle on
  Windows (not the same thing as a Windows process id).
2916

2917
- New tempfile.TemporaryFile implementation for Windows:  this doesn't
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2918
  need a TemporaryFileWrapper wrapper anymore, and should be immune
2919 2920 2921 2922 2923 2924 2925 2926 2927 2928 2929 2930 2931 2932 2933 2934 2935 2936 2937 2938 2939
  to a nasty problem:  before 2.3, if you got a temp file on Windows, it
  got wrapped in an object whose close() method first closed the
  underlying file, then deleted the file.  This usually worked fine.
  However, the spawn family of functions on Windows create (at a low C
  level) the same set of open files in the spawned process Q as were
  open in the spawning process P.  If a temp file f was among them, then
  doing f.close() in P first closed P's C-level file handle on f, but Q's
  C-level file handle on f remained open, so the attempt in P to delete f
  blew up with a "Permission denied" error (Windows doesn't allow
  deleting open files).  This was surprising, subtle, and difficult to
  work around.

- The os module now exports all the symbolic constants usable with the
  low-level os.open() on Windows:  the new constants in 2.3 are
  O_NOINHERIT, O_SHORT_LIVED, O_TEMPORARY, O_RANDOM and O_SEQUENTIAL.
  The others were also available in 2.2:  O_APPEND, O_BINARY, O_CREAT,
  O_EXCL, O_RDONLY, O_RDWR, O_TEXT, O_TRUNC and O_WRONLY.  Contrary
  to Microsoft docs, O_SHORT_LIVED does not seem to imply O_TEMPORARY
  (so specify both if you want both; note that neither is useful unless
  specified with O_CREAT too).

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Mac
2941 2942
----

2943 2944
- Mac/Relnotes is gone, the release notes are now here.

2945 2946 2947 2948
- Python (the OSX-only, unix-based version, not the OS9-compatible CFM
  version) now fully supports unicode strings as arguments to various file
  system calls, eg. open(), file(), os.stat() and os.listdir().

2949 2950 2951 2952 2953 2954 2955 2956 2957 2958 2959 2960
- The current naming convention for Python on the Macintosh is that MacPython
  refers to the unix-based OSX-only version, and MacPython-OS9 refers to the
  CFM-based version that runs on both OS9 and OSX.

- All MacPython-OS9 functionality is now available in an OSX unix build,
  including the Carbon modules, the IDE, OSA support, etc. A lot of this
  will only work correctly in a framework build, though, because you cannot
  talk to the window manager unless your application is run from a .app
  bundle. There is a command line tool "pythonw" that runs your script
  with an interpreter living in such a .app bundle, this interpreter should
  be used to run any Python script using the window manager (including
  Tkinter or wxPython scripts).
2961

2962 2963 2964
- Most of Mac/Lib has moved to Lib/plat-mac, which is again used both in
  MacPython-OSX and MacPython-OS9. The only modules remaining in Mac/Lib
  are specifically for MacPython-OS9 (CFM support, preference resources, etc).
2965

2966 2967 2968 2969 2970
- A new utility PythonLauncher will start a Python interpreter when a .py or
  .pyw script is double-clicked in the Finder. By default .py scripts are
  run with a normal Python interpreter in a Terminal window and .pyw
  files are run with a window-aware pythonw interpreter without a Terminal
  window, but all this can be customized.
2971

2972 2973 2974
- MacPython-OS9 is now Carbon-only, so it runs on Mac OS 9 or Mac OS X and
  possibly on Mac OS 8.6 with the right CarbonLib installed, but not on earlier
  releases.
2975

2976 2977
- Many tools such as BuildApplet.py and gensuitemodule.py now support a command
  line interface too.
2978

2979 2980 2981 2982 2983
- All the Carbon classes are now PEP253 compliant, meaning that you can
  subclass them from Python. Most of the attributes have gone, you should
  now use the accessor function call API, which is also what Apple's
  documentation uses. Some attributes such as grafport.visRgn are still
  available for convenience.
2984

2985 2986 2987 2988 2989 2990 2991
- New Carbon modules File (implementing the APIs in Files.h and Aliases.h)
  and Folder (APIs from Folders.h). The old macfs builtin module is
  gone, and replaced by a Python wrapper around the new modules.

- Pathname handling should now be fully consistent: MacPython-OSX always uses
  unix pathnames and MacPython-OS9 always uses colon-separated Mac pathnames
  (also when running on Mac OS X).
2992

2993 2994 2995 2996
- New Carbon modules Help and AH give access to the Carbon Help Manager.
  There are hooks in the IDE to allow accessing the Python documentation
  (and Apple's Carbon and Cocoa documentation) through the Help Viewer.
  See Mac/OSX/README for converting the Python documentation to a
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  Help Viewer compatible form and installing it.
2998

2999 3000
- OSA support has been redesigned and the generated Python classes now
  mirror the inheritance defined by the underlying OSA classes.
3001

3002 3003
- MacPython no longer maps both \r and \n to \n on input for any text file.
  This feature has been replaced by universal newline support (PEP278).
3004

3005
- The default encoding for Python sourcefiles in MacPython-OS9 is no longer
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3006
  mac-roman (or whatever your local Mac encoding was) but "ascii", like on
3007 3008
  other platforms. If you really need sourcefiles with Mac characters in them
  you can change this in site.py.
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3011 3012 3013
What's New in Python 2.2 final?
===============================

3014 3015
*Release date: 21-Dec-2001*

3016
Type/class unification and new-style classes
3017
--------------------------------------------
3018

3019 3020 3021
- pickle.py, cPickle: allow pickling instances of new-style classes
  with a custom metaclass.

3022
Core and builtins
3023
-----------------
3024

3025 3026 3027
- weakref proxy object: when comparing, unwrap both arguments if both
  are proxies.

3028
Extension modules
3029
-----------------
3030

3031 3032 3033 3034 3035 3036 3037 3038 3039
- binascii.b2a_base64(): fix a potential buffer overrun when encoding
  very short strings.

- cPickle: the obscure "fast" mode was suspected of causing stack
  overflows on the Mac.  Hopefully fixed this by setting the recursion
  limit much smaller.  If the limit is too low (it only affects
  performance), you can change it by defining PY_CPICKLE_FAST_LIMIT
  when compiling cPickle.c (or in pyconfig.h).

3040
Library
3041
-------
3042

3043 3044 3045 3046 3047 3048 3049 3050 3051
- dumbdbm.py: fixed a dumb old bug (the file didn't get synched at
  close or delete time).

- rfc822.py: fixed a bug where the address '<>' was converted to None
  instead of an empty string (also fixes the email.Utils module).

- xmlrpclib.py: version 1.0.0; uses precision for doubles.

- test suite: the pickle and cPickle tests were not executing any code
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  when run from the standard regression test.
3053

3054
Tools/Demos
3055
-----------
3056 3057

Build
3058
-----
3059 3060

C API
3061
-----
3062 3063

New platforms
3064
-------------
3065 3066

Tests
3067
-----
3068 3069

Windows
3070
-------
3071

3072 3073 3074 3075 3076 3077 3078 3079 3080 3081 3082
- distutils package: fixed broken Windows installers (bdist_wininst).

- tempfile.py: prevent mysterious warnings when TemporaryFileWrapper
  instances are deleted at process exit time.

- socket.py: prevent mysterious warnings when socket instances are
  deleted at process exit time.

- posixmodule.c: fix a Windows crash with stat() of a filename ending
  in backslash.

3083
Mac
3084
----
3085

3086 3087 3088 3089
- The Carbon toolbox modules have been upgraded to Universal Headers
  3.4, and experimental CoreGraphics and CarbonEvents modules have
  been added.  All only for framework-enabled MacOSX.

3090

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3091
What's New in Python 2.2c1?
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3092 3093
===========================

3094 3095
*Release date: 14-Dec-2001*

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3096
Type/class unification and new-style classes
3097
--------------------------------------------
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3099 3100 3101 3102 3103 3104 3105
- Guido's tutorial introduction to the new type/class features has
  been extensively updated.  See

      http://www.python.org/2.2/descrintro.html

  That remains the primary documentation in this area.

3106 3107 3108
- Fixed a leak: instance variables declared with __slots__ were never
  deleted!

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3109 3110 3111 3112 3113 3114
- The "delete attribute" method of descriptor objects is called
  __delete__, not __del__.  In previous releases, it was mistakenly
  called __del__, which created an unfortunate overloading condition
  with finalizers.  (The "get attribute" and "set attribute" methods
  are still called __get__ and __set__, respectively.)

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3115 3116 3117 3118 3119 3120 3121 3122 3123 3124 3125 3126 3127 3128
- Some subtle issues with the super built-in were fixed:

  (a) When super itself is subclassed, its __get__ method would still
      return an instance of the base class (i.e., of super).

  (b) super(C, C()).__class__ would return C rather than super.  This
      is confusing.  To fix this, I decided to change the semantics of
      super so that it only applies to code attributes, not to data
      attributes.  After all, overriding data attributes is not
      supported anyway.

  (c) The __get__ method didn't check whether the argument was an
      instance of the type used in creation of the super instance.

3129 3130 3131 3132 3133
- Previously, hash() of an instance of a subclass of a mutable type
  (list or dictionary) would return some value, rather than raising
  TypeError.  This has been fixed.  Also, directly calling
  dict.__hash__ and list.__hash__ now raises the same TypeError
  (previously, these were the same as object.__hash__).
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3135 3136 3137 3138
- New-style objects now support deleting their __dict__.  This is for
  all intents and purposes equivalent to assigning a brand new empty
  dictionary, but saves space if the object is not used further.

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Core and builtins
3140
-----------------
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3142 3143 3144 3145 3146 3147
- -Qnew now works as documented in PEP 238:  when -Qnew is passed on
  the command line, all occurrences of "/" use true division instead
  of classic division.  See the PEP for details.  Note that "all"
  means all instances in library and 3rd-party modules, as well as in
  your own code.  As the PEP says, -Qnew is intended for use only in
  educational environments with control over the libraries in use.
3148 3149 3150 3151
  Note that test_coercion.py in the standard Python test suite fails
  under -Qnew; this is expected, and won't be repaired until true
  division becomes the default (in the meantime, test_coercion is
  testing the current rules).
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3153 3154 3155 3156
- complex() now only allows the first argument to be a string
  argument, and raises TypeError if either the second arg is a string
  or if the second arg is specified when the first is a string.

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Extension modules
3158
-----------------
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3160 3161
- gc.get_referents was renamed to gc.get_referrers.

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Library
3163
-------
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3165 3166 3167 3168 3169 3170 3171
- Functions in the os.spawn() family now release the global interpreter
  lock around calling the platform spawn.  They should always have done
  this, but did not before 2.2c1.  Multithreaded programs calling
  an os.spawn function with P_WAIT will no longer block all Python threads
  until the spawned program completes.  It's possible that some programs
  relies on blocking, although more likely by accident than by design.

3172 3173
- webbrowser defaults to netscape.exe on OS/2 now.

3174 3175
- Tix.ResizeHandle exposes detach_widget, hide, and show.

3176 3177
- The charset alias windows_1252 has been added.

3178 3179 3180 3181 3182 3183
- types.StringTypes is a tuple containing the defined string types;
  usually this will be (str, unicode), but if Python was compiled
  without Unicode support it will be just (str,).

- The pulldom and minidom modules were synchronized to PyXML.

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Tools/Demos
3185
-----------
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3187 3188 3189
- A new script called Tools/scripts/google.py was added, which fires
  off a search on Google.

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Build
3191
-----
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3193 3194 3195 3196 3197 3198 3199 3200
- Note that release builds of Python should arrange to define the
  preprocessor symbol NDEBUG on the command line (or equivalent).
  In the 2.2 pre-release series we tried to define this by magic in
  Python.h instead, but it proved to cause problems for extension
  authors.  The Unix, Windows and Mac builds now all define NDEBUG in
  release builds via cmdline (or equivalent) instead.  Ports to
  other platforms should do likewise.

3201 3202 3203 3204
- It is no longer necessary to use --with-suffix when building on a
  case-insensitive file system (such as Mac OS X HFS+). In the build
  directory an extension is used, but not in the installed python.

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C API
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-----
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3208 3209 3210 3211
- New function PyDict_MergeFromSeq2() exposes the builtin dict
  constructor's logic for updating a dictionary from an iterable object
  producing key-value pairs.

3212
- PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords() requires that the number of entries in
3213
  the keyword list equal the number of argument specifiers.  This
3214 3215 3216 3217 3218
  wasn't checked correctly, and PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords could even
  dump core in some bad cases.  This has been repaired.  As a result,
  PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords may raise RuntimeError in bad cases that
  previously went unchallenged.

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3219
New platforms
3220
-------------
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3221 3222

Tests
3223
-----
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3224 3225

Windows
3226
-------
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3227 3228

Mac
3229
----
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3230

3231 3232
- In unix-Python on Mac OS X (and darwin) sys.platform is now "darwin",
  without any trailing digits.
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3233

3234 3235 3236 3237 3238 3239
- Changed logic for finding python home in Mac OS X framework Pythons.
  Now sys.executable points to the executable again, in stead of to
  the shared library. The latter is used only for locating the python
  home.


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3240 3241 3242
What's New in Python 2.2b2?
===========================

3243 3244
*Release date: 16-Nov-2001*

Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
3245
Type/class unification and new-style classes
3246
--------------------------------------------
Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
3247

3248 3249
- Multiple inheritance mixing new-style and classic classes in the
  list of base classes is now allowed, so this works now:
3250 3251

      class Classic: pass
3252
      class Mixed(Classic, object): pass
3253 3254 3255

  The MRO (method resolution order) for each base class is respected
  according to its kind, but the MRO for the derived class is computed
Andrew M. Kuchling's avatar
Andrew M. Kuchling committed
3256
  using new-style MRO rules if any base class is a new-style class.
3257 3258
  This needs to be documented.

3259 3260 3261
- The new builtin dictionary() constructor, and dictionary type, have
  been renamed to dict.  This reflects a decade of common usage.

3262 3263 3264 3265
- dict() now accepts an iterable object producing 2-sequences.  For
  example, dict(d.items()) == d for any dictionary d.  The argument,
  and the elements of the argument, can be any iterable objects.

3266 3267 3268
- New-style classes can now have a __del__ method, which is called
  when the instance is deleted (just like for classic classes).

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3269 3270 3271 3272
- Assignment to object.__dict__ is now possible, for objects that are
  instances of new-style classes that have a __dict__ (unless the base
  class forbids it).

3273 3274 3275 3276
- Methods of built-in types now properly check for keyword arguments
  (formerly these were silently ignored).  The only built-in methods
  that take keyword arguments are __call__, __init__ and __new__.

3277 3278
- The socket function has been converted to a type; see below.

Tim Peters's avatar
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3279
Core and builtins
3280
-----------------
Tim Peters's avatar
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3281

3282 3283
- Assignment to __debug__ raises SyntaxError at compile-time.  This
  was promised when 2.1c1 was released as "What's New in Python 2.1c1"
3284
  (see below) says.
3285

Guido van Rossum's avatar
Guido van Rossum committed
3286 3287 3288
- Clarified the error messages for unsupported operands to an operator
  (like 1 + '').

Tim Peters's avatar
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3289
Extension modules
3290
-----------------
Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
3291

3292 3293 3294 3295
- mmap has a new keyword argument, "access", allowing a uniform way for
  both Windows and Unix users to create read-only, write-through and
  copy-on-write memory mappings.  This was previously possible only on
  Unix.  A new keyword argument was required to support this in a
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3296
  uniform way because the mmap() signatures had diverged across
3297 3298
  platforms.  Thanks to Jay T Miller for repairing this!

3299 3300 3301 3302 3303
- By default, the gc.garbage list now contains only those instances in
  unreachable cycles that have __del__ methods; in 2.1 it contained all
  instances in unreachable cycles.  "Instances" here has been generalized
  to include instances of both new-style and old-style classes.

Guido van Rossum's avatar
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3304 3305
- The socket module defines a new method for socket objects,
  sendall().  This is like send() but may make multiple calls to
3306 3307 3308
  send() until all data has been sent.  Also, the socket function has
  been converted to a subclassable type, like list and tuple (etc.)
  before it; socket and SocketType are now the same thing.
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3309 3310 3311

- Various bugfixes to the curses module.  There is now a test suite
  for the curses module (you have to run it manually).
3312

3313 3314 3315
- binascii.b2a_base64 no longer places an arbitrary restriction of 57
  bytes on its input.

Tim Peters's avatar
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3316
Library
3317
-------
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Tim Peters committed
3318

3319
- tkFileDialog exposes a Directory class and askdirectory
3320 3321
  convenience function.

3322 3323 3324
- Symbolic group names in regular expressions must be unique.  For
  example, the regexp r'(?P<abc>)(?P<abc>)' is not allowed, because a
  single name can't mean both "group 1" and "group 2" simultaneously.
3325 3326 3327 3328 3329 3330
  Python 2.2 detects this error at regexp compilation time;
  previously, the error went undetected, and results were
  unpredictable.  Also in sre, the pattern.split(), pattern.sub(), and
  pattern.subn() methods have been rewritten in C.  Also, an
  experimental function/method finditer() has been added, which works
  like findall() but returns an iterator.
3331

3332 3333 3334 3335 3336
- Tix exposes more commands through the classes DirSelectBox,
  DirSelectDialog, ListNoteBook, Meter, CheckList, and the
  methods tix_addbitmapdir, tix_cget, tix_configure, tix_filedialog,
  tix_getbitmap, tix_getimage, tix_option_get, and tix_resetoptions.

3337 3338 3339 3340
- Traceback objects are now scanned by cyclic garbage collection, so
  cycles created by casual use of sys.exc_info() no longer cause
  permanent memory leaks (provided garbage collection is enabled).

3341 3342 3343 3344 3345
- os.extsep -- a new variable needed by the RISCOS support.  It is the
  separator used by extensions, and is '.' on all platforms except
  RISCOS, where it is '/'.  There is no need to use this variable
  unless you have a masochistic desire to port your code to RISCOS.

3346 3347
- mimetypes.py has optional support for non-standard, but commonly
  found types.  guess_type() and guess_extension() now accept an
3348
  optional 'strict' flag, defaulting to true, which controls whether
3349 3350 3351 3352 3353 3354 3355 3356
  recognize non-standard types or not.  A few non-standard types we
  know about have been added.  Also, when run as a script, there are
  new -l and -e options.

- statcache is now deprecated.

- email.Utils.formatdate() now produces the preferred RFC 2822 style
  dates with numeric timezones (it used to produce obsolete dates
3357
  hard coded to "GMT" timezone).  An optional 'localtime' flag is
3358 3359 3360 3361 3362 3363 3364 3365
  added to produce dates in the local timezone, with daylight savings
  time properly taken into account.

- In pickle and cPickle, instead of masking errors in load() by
  transforming them into SystemError, we let the original exception
  propagate out.  Also, implement support for __safe_for_unpickling__
  in pickle, as it already was supported in cPickle.

Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
3366
Tools/Demos
3367
-----------
Tim Peters's avatar
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3368 3369

Build
3370
-----
Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
3371

3372 3373 3374 3375 3376
- The dbm module is built using libdb1 if available.  The bsddb module
  is built with libdb3 if available.

- Misc/Makefile.pre.in has been removed by BDFL pronouncement.

Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
3377
C API
3378
-----
Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
3379

3380 3381 3382 3383
- New function PySequence_Fast_GET_SIZE() returns the size of a non-
  NULL result from PySequence_Fast(), more quickly than calling
  PySequence_Size().

3384 3385 3386 3387 3388 3389 3390 3391 3392 3393 3394 3395
- New argument unpacking function PyArg_UnpackTuple() added.

- New functions PyObject_CallFunctionObjArgs() and
  PyObject_CallMethodObjArgs() have been added to make it more
  convenient and efficient to call functions and methods from C.

- PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords() no longer masks errors, so it's
  possible that this will propagate errors it didn't before.

- New function PyObject_CheckReadBuffer(), which returns true if its
  argument supports the single-segment readable buffer interface.

Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
3396
New platforms
3397
-------------
Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
3398

3399 3400 3401
- We've finally confirmed that this release builds on HP-UX 11.00,
  *with* threads, and passes the test suite.

3402 3403 3404
- Thanks to a series of patches from Michael Muller, Python may build
  again under OS/2 Visual Age C++.

3405 3406
- Updated RISCOS port by Dietmar Schwertberger.

Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
3407
Tests
3408
-----
Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
3409

3410 3411 3412
- Added a test script for the curses module.  It isn't run automatically;
  regrtest.py must be run with '-u curses' to enable it.

Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
3413
Windows
3414
-------
Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
3415

3416
Mac
3417
----
3418 3419 3420 3421 3422 3423 3424 3425 3426 3427 3428 3429

- PythonScript has been moved to unsupported and is slated to be
  removed completely in the next release.

- It should now be possible to build applets that work on both OS9 and
  OSX.

- The core is now linked with CoreServices not Carbon; as a side
  result, default 8bit encoding on OSX is now ASCII.

- Python should now build on OSX 10.1.1

Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
3430

3431 3432 3433
What's New in Python 2.2b1?
===========================

3434 3435
*Release date: 19-Oct-2001*

3436
Type/class unification and new-style classes
3437
--------------------------------------------
3438

3439
- New-style classes are now always dynamic (except for built-in and
3440
  extension types).  There is no longer a performance penalty, and I
3441
  no longer see another reason to keep this baggage around.  One relic
3442 3443
  remains: the __dict__ of a new-style class is a read-only proxy; you
  must set the class's attribute to modify it.  As a consequence, the
3444 3445
  __defined__ attribute of new-style types no longer exists, for lack
  of need: there is once again only one __dict__ (although in the
3446 3447
  future a __cache__ may be resurrected with a similar function, if I
  can prove that it actually speeds things up).
3448

Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
3449 3450 3451 3452 3453 3454
- C.__doc__ now works as expected for new-style classes (in 2.2a4 it
  always returned None, even when there was a class docstring).

- doctest now finds and runs docstrings attached to new-style classes,
  class methods, static methods, and properties.

3455
Core and builtins
3456
-----------------
3457

3458 3459 3460 3461 3462 3463 3464 3465 3466
- A very subtle syntactical pitfall in list comprehensions was fixed.
  For example: [a+b for a in 'abc', for b in 'def'].  The comma in
  this example is a mistake.  Previously, this would silently let 'a'
  iterate over the singleton tuple ('abc',), yielding ['abcd', 'abce',
  'abcf'] rather than the intended ['ad', 'ae', 'af', 'bd', 'be',
  'bf', 'cd', 'ce', 'cf'].  Now, this is flagged as a syntax error.
  Note that [a for a in <singleton>] is a convoluted way to say
  [<singleton>] anyway, so it's not like any expressiveness is lost.

3467 3468 3469 3470 3471
- getattr(obj, name, default) now only catches AttributeError, as
  documented, rather than returning the default value for all
  exceptions (which could mask bugs in a __getattr__ hook, for
  example).

3472
- Weak reference objects are now part of the core and offer a C API.
3473
  A bug which could allow a core dump when binary operations involved
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3474
  proxy reference has been fixed.  weakref.ReferenceError is now a
3475
  built-in exception.
3476

3477 3478 3479
- unicode(obj) now behaves more like str(obj), accepting arbitrary
  objects, and calling a __unicode__ method if it exists.
  unicode(obj, encoding) and unicode(obj, encoding, errors) still
3480
  require an 8-bit string or character buffer argument.
3481

3482 3483 3484 3485 3486 3487 3488 3489 3490 3491 3492
- isinstance() now allows any object as the first argument and a
  class, a type or something with a __bases__ tuple attribute for the
  second argument.  The second argument may also be a tuple of a
  class, type, or something with __bases__, in which case isinstance()
  will return true if the first argument is an instance of any of the
  things contained in the second argument tuple.  E.g.

  isinstance(x, (A, B))

  returns true if x is an instance of A or B.

3493
Extension modules
3494
-----------------
3495 3496 3497

- thread.start_new_thread() now returns the thread ID (previously None).

3498 3499
- binascii has now two quopri support functions, a2b_qp and b2a_qp.

3500 3501 3502 3503 3504 3505 3506 3507 3508
- readline now supports setting the startup_hook and the
  pre_event_hook, and adds the add_history() function.

- os and posix supports chroot(), setgroups() and unsetenv() where
  available.  The stat(), fstat(), statvfs() and fstatvfs() functions
  now return "pseudo-sequences" -- the various fields can now be
  accessed as attributes (e.g. os.stat("/").st_mtime) but for
  backwards compatibility they also behave as a fixed-length sequence.
  Some platform-specific fields (e.g. st_rdev) are only accessible as
3509 3510 3511 3512 3513
  attributes.

- time: localtime(), gmtime() and strptime() now return a
  pseudo-sequence similar to the os.stat() return value, with
  attributes like tm_year etc.
3514

3515 3516 3517
- Decompression objects in the zlib module now accept an optional
  second parameter to decompress() that specifies the maximum amount
  of memory to use for the uncompressed data.
3518

3519 3520 3521
- optional SSL support in the socket module now exports OpenSSL
  functions RAND_add(), RAND_egd(), and RAND_status().  These calls
  are useful on platforms like Solaris where OpenSSL does not
3522 3523 3524 3525 3526
  automatically seed its PRNG.  Also, the keyfile and certfile
  arguments to socket.ssl() are now optional.

- posixmodule (and by extension, the os module on POSIX platforms) now
  exports O_LARGEFILE, O_DIRECT, O_DIRECTORY, and O_NOFOLLOW.
3527

3528
Library
3529
-------
3530

3531 3532 3533
- doctest now excludes functions and classes not defined by the module
  being tested, thanks to Tim Hochberg.

3534 3535 3536 3537 3538
- HotShot, a new profiler implemented using a C-based callback, has
  been added.  This substantially reduces the overhead of profiling,
  but it is still quite preliminary.  Support modules and
  documentation will be added in upcoming releases (before 2.2 final).

Guido van Rossum's avatar
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3539 3540 3541 3542 3543
- profile now produces correct output in situations where an exception
  raised in Python is cleared by C code (e.g. hasattr()).  This used
  to cause wrong output, including spurious claims of recursive
  functions and attribution of time spent to the wrong function.

3544 3545 3546 3547 3548 3549 3550 3551 3552
  The code and documentation for the derived OldProfile and HotProfile
  profiling classes was removed.  The code hasn't worked for years (if
  you tried to use them, they raised exceptions).  OldProfile
  intended to reproduce the behavior of the profiler Python used more
  than 7 years ago, and isn't interesting anymore.  HotProfile intended
  to provide a faster profiler (but producing less information), and
  that's a worthy goal we intend to meet via a different approach (but
  without losing information).

3553
- Profile.calibrate() has a new implementation that should deliver
3554 3555 3556 3557 3558 3559
  a much better system-specific calibration constant.  The constant can
  now be specified in an instance constructor, or as a Profile class or
  instance variable, instead of by editing profile.py's source code.
  Calibration must still be done manually (see the docs for the profile
  module).

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Raymond Hettinger committed
3560
  Note that Profile.calibrate() must be overridden by subclasses.
3561 3562 3563 3564
  Improving the accuracy required exploiting detailed knowledge of
  profiler internals; the earlier method abstracted away the details
  and measured a simplified model instead, but consequently computed
  a constant too small by a factor of 2 on some modern machines.
3565

3566
- quopri's encode and decode methods take an optional header parameter,
3567 3568 3569
  which indicates whether output is intended for the header 'Q'
  encoding.

3570 3571 3572
- The SocketServer.ThreadingMixIn class now closes the request after
  finish_request() returns.  (Not when it errors out though.)

3573
- The nntplib module's NNTP.body() method has grown a 'file' argument
3574 3575 3576 3577 3578 3579 3580 3581 3582 3583 3584 3585
  to allow saving the message body to a file.

- The email package has added a class email.Parser.HeaderParser which
  only parses headers and does not recurse into the message's body.
  Also, the module/class MIMEAudio has been added for representing
  audio data (contributed by Anthony Baxter).

- ftplib should be able to handle files > 2GB.

- ConfigParser.getboolean() now also interprets TRUE, FALSE, YES, NO,
  ON, and OFF.

3586 3587 3588
- xml.dom.minidom NodeList objects now support the length attribute
  and item() method as required by the DOM specifications.

3589
Tools/Demos
3590
-----------
3591 3592 3593 3594

- Demo/dns was removed.  It no longer serves any purpose; a package
  derived from it is now maintained by Anthony Baxter, see
  http://PyDNS.SourceForge.net.
3595

3596 3597 3598
- The freeze tool has been made more robust, and two new options have
  been added: -X and -E.

3599
Build
3600
-----
3601

3602 3603 3604
- configure will use CXX in LINKCC if CXX is used to build main() and
  the system requires to link a C++ main using the C++ compiler.

3605
C API
3606
-----
3607

3608 3609 3610 3611 3612 3613
- The documentation for the tp_compare slot is updated to require that
  the return value must be -1, 0, 1; an arbitrary number <0 or >0 is
  not correct.  This is not yet enforced but will be enforced in
  Python 2.3; even later, we may use -2 to indicate errors and +2 for
  "NotImplemented".  Right now, -1 should be used for an error return.

3614 3615 3616 3617
- PyLong_AsLongLong() now accepts int (as well as long) arguments.
  Consequently, PyArg_ParseTuple's 'L' code also accepts int (as well
  as long) arguments.

3618 3619 3620 3621 3622 3623 3624
- PyThread_start_new_thread() now returns a long int giving the thread
  ID, if one can be calculated; it returns -1 for error, 0 if no
  thread ID is calculated (this is an incompatible change, but only
  the thread module used this API).  This code has only really been
  tested on Linux and Windows; other platforms please beware (and
  report any bugs or strange behavior).

3625 3626 3627
- PyUnicode_FromEncodedObject() no longer accepts Unicode objects as
  input.

3628
New platforms
3629
-------------
3630 3631

Tests
3632
-----
3633 3634

Windows
3635
-------
3636

3637 3638 3639 3640
- Installer:  If you install IDLE, and don't disable file-extension
  registration, a new "Edit with IDLE" context (right-click) menu entry
  is created for .py and .pyw files.

3641 3642 3643
- The signal module now supports SIGBREAK on Windows, thanks to Steven
  Scott.  Note that SIGBREAK is unique to Windows.  The default SIGBREAK
  action remains to call Win32 ExitProcess().  This can be changed via
3644
  signal.signal().  For example::
3645

3646 3647 3648 3649
      # Make Ctrl+Break raise KeyboardInterrupt, like Python's default Ctrl+C
      # (SIGINT) behavior.
      import signal
      signal.signal(signal.SIGBREAK, signal.default_int_handler)
3650

3651
      try:
3652 3653
          while 1:
              pass
3654
      except KeyboardInterrupt:
3655 3656 3657 3658
          # We get here on Ctrl+C or Ctrl+Break now; if we had not changed
          # SIGBREAK, only on Ctrl+C (and Ctrl+Break would terminate the
          # program without the possibility for any Python-level cleanup).
          print "Clean exit"
3659

3660

Tim Peters's avatar
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3661 3662 3663
What's New in Python 2.2a4?
===========================

3664 3665
*Release date: 28-Sep-2001*

3666
Type/class unification and new-style classes
3667
--------------------------------------------
3668 3669 3670 3671 3672 3673 3674 3675 3676 3677 3678 3679

- pydoc and inspect are now aware of new-style classes;
  e.g. help(list) at the interactive prompt now shows proper
  documentation for all operations on list objects.

- Applications using Jim Fulton's ExtensionClass module can now safely
  be used with Python 2.2.  In particular, Zope 2.4.1 now works with
  Python 2.2 (as well as with Python 2.1.1).  The Demo/metaclass
  examples also work again.  It is hoped that Gtk and Boost also work
  with 2.2a4 and beyond.  (If you can confirm this, please write
  webmaster@python.org; if there are still problems, please open a bug
  report on SourceForge.)
Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
3680

3681
- property() now takes 4 keyword arguments:  fget, fset, fdel and doc.
Andrew M. Kuchling's avatar
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3682
  These map to read-only attributes 'fget', 'fset', 'fdel', and '__doc__'
3683 3684 3685 3686
  in the constructed property object.  fget, fset and fdel weren't
  discoverable from Python in 2.2a3.  __doc__ is new, and allows to
  associate a docstring with a property.

3687 3688 3689 3690 3691 3692 3693 3694 3695 3696 3697 3698 3699 3700 3701 3702
- Comparison overloading is now more completely implemented.  For
  example, a str subclass instance can properly be compared to a str
  instance, and it can properly overload comparison.  Ditto for most
  other built-in object types.

- The repr() of new-style classes has changed; instead of <type
  'M.Foo'> a new-style class is now rendered as <class 'M.Foo'>,
  *except* for built-in types, which are still rendered as <type
  'Foo'> (to avoid upsetting existing code that might parse or
  otherwise rely on repr() of certain type objects).

- The repr() of new-style objects is now always <Foo object at XXX>;
  previously, it was sometimes <Foo instance at XXX>.

- For new-style classes, what was previously called __getattr__ is now
  called __getattribute__.  This method, if defined, is called for
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3703
  *every* attribute access.  A new __getattr__ hook more similar to the
3704 3705 3706 3707 3708 3709 3710 3711 3712 3713 3714 3715 3716 3717 3718 3719 3720 3721 3722 3723 3724 3725 3726 3727 3728 3729 3730 3731
  one in classic classes is defined which is called only if regular
  attribute access raises AttributeError; to catch *all* attribute
  access, you can use __getattribute__ (for new-style classes).  If
  both are defined, __getattribute__ is called first, and if it raises
  AttributeError, __getattr__ is called.

- The __class__ attribute of new-style objects can be assigned to.
  The new class must have the same C-level object layout as the old
  class.

- The builtin file type can be subclassed now.  In the usual pattern,
  "file" is the name of the builtin type, and file() is a new builtin
  constructor, with the same signature as the builtin open() function.
  file() is now the preferred way to open a file.

- Previously, __new__ would only see sequential arguments passed to
  the type in a constructor call; __init__ would see both sequential
  and keyword arguments.  This made no sense whatsoever any more, so
  now both __new__ and __init__ see all arguments.

- Previously, hash() applied to an instance of a subclass of str or
  unicode always returned 0.  This has been repaired.

- Previously, an operation on an instance of a subclass of an
  immutable type (int, long, float, complex, tuple, str, unicode),
  where the subtype didn't override the operation (and so the
  operation was handled by the builtin type), could return that
  instance instead a value of the base type.  For example, if s was of
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3732
  a str subclass type, s[:] returned s as-is.  Now it returns a str
3733 3734
  with the same value as s.

3735 3736
- Provisional support for pickling new-style objects has been added.

3737
Core
3738
----
3739

3740 3741
- file.writelines() now accepts any iterable object producing strings.

3742 3743 3744 3745 3746 3747
- PyUnicode_FromEncodedObject() now works very much like
  PyObject_Str(obj) in that it tries to use __str__/tp_str
  on the object if the object is not a string or buffer. This
  makes unicode() behave like str() when applied to non-string/buffer
  objects.

Andrew M. Kuchling's avatar
Andrew M. Kuchling committed
3748 3749
- PyFile_WriteObject now passes Unicode objects to the file's write
  method. As a result, all file-like objects which may be the target
3750 3751 3752
  of a print statement must support Unicode objects, i.e. they must
  at least convert them into ASCII strings.

3753 3754 3755 3756
- Thread scheduling on Solaris should be improved; it is no longer
  necessary to insert a small sleep at the start of a thread in order
  to let other runnable threads be scheduled.

Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
3757
Library
3758
-------
Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
3759

3760 3761 3762 3763 3764
- StringIO.StringIO instances and cStringIO.StringIO instances support
  read character buffer compatible objects for their .write() methods.
  These objects are converted to strings and then handled as such
  by the instances.

3765 3766 3767 3768
- The "email" package has been added.  This is basically a port of the
  mimelib package <http://sf.net/projects/mimelib> with API changes
  and some implementations updated to use iterators and generators.

3769 3770 3771 3772
- difflib.ndiff() and difflib.Differ.compare() are generators now.  This
  restores the ability of Tools/scripts/ndiff.py to start producing output
  before the entire comparison is complete.

3773 3774 3775 3776
- StringIO.StringIO instances and cStringIO.StringIO instances support
  iteration just like file objects (i.e. their .readline() method is
  called for each iteration until it returns an empty string).

3777 3778 3779 3780
- The codecs module has grown four new helper APIs to access
  builtin codecs: getencoder(), getdecoder(), getreader(),
  getwriter().

3781 3782 3783
- SimpleXMLRPCServer: a new module (based upon SimpleHTMLServer)
  simplifies writing XML RPC servers.

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- os.path.realpath(): a new function that returns the absolute pathname
3785 3786 3787
  after interpretation of symbolic links.  On non-Unix systems, this
  is an alias for os.path.abspath().

3788 3789 3790
- operator.indexOf() (PySequence_Index() in the C API) now works with any
  iterable object.

3791 3792 3793 3794 3795
- smtplib now supports various authentication and security features of
  the SMTP protocol through the new login() and starttls() methods.

- hmac: a new module implementing keyed hashing for message
  authentication.
3796

3797 3798
- mimetypes now recognizes more extensions and file types.  At the
  same time, some mappings not sanctioned by IANA were removed.
3799

3800
- The "compiler" package has been brought up to date to the state of
3801 3802 3803 3804
  Python 2.2 bytecode generation.  It has also been promoted from a
  Tool to a standard library package.  (Tools/compiler still exists as
  a sample driver.)

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Build
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-----
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3808 3809 3810 3811 3812 3813 3814 3815 3816 3817 3818 3819 3820 3821 3822 3823 3824 3825
- Large file support (LFS) is now automatic when the platform supports
  it; no more manual configuration tweaks are needed.  On Linux, at
  least, it's possible to have a system whose C library supports large
  files but whose kernel doesn't; in this case, large file support is
  still enabled but doesn't do you any good unless you upgrade your
  kernel or share your Python executable with another system whose
  kernel has large file support.

- The configure script now supplies plausible defaults in a
  cross-compilation environment.  This doesn't mean that the supplied
  values are always correct, or that cross-compilation now works
  flawlessly -- but it's a first step (and it shuts up most of
  autoconf's warnings about AC_TRY_RUN).

- The Unix build is now a bit less chatty, courtesy of the parser
  generator.  The build is completely silent (except for errors) when
  using "make -s", thanks to a -q option to setup.py.

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C API
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-----
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3829 3830 3831
- The "structmember" API now supports some new flag bits to deny read
  and/or write access to attributes in restricted execution mode.

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New platforms
3833
-------------
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3835 3836 3837
- Compaq's iPAQ handheld, running the "familiar" Linux distribution
  (http://familiar.handhelds.org).

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Tests
3839
-----
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3841 3842 3843 3844 3845 3846 3847 3848 3849 3850 3851 3852 3853 3854
- The "classic" standard tests, which work by comparing stdout to
  an expected-output file under Lib/test/output/, no longer stop at
  the first mismatch.  Instead the test is run to completion, and a
  variant of ndiff-style comparison is used to report all differences.
  This is much easier to understand than the previous style of reporting.

- The unittest-based standard tests now use regrtest's test_main()
  convention, instead of running as a side-effect of merely being
  imported.  This allows these tests to be run in more natural and
  flexible ways as unittests, outside the regrtest framework.

- regrtest.py is much better integrated with unittest and doctest now,
  especially in regard to reporting errors.

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Windows
3856
-------
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3857

3858
- Large file support now also works for files > 4GB, on filesystems
3859 3860
  that support it (NTFS under Windows 2000).  See "What's New in
  Python 2.2a3" for more detail.
3861

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3863 3864 3865
What's New in Python 2.2a3?
===========================

3866 3867
*Release Date: 07-Sep-2001*

3868
Core
3869
----
3870

3871 3872 3873
- Conversion of long to float now raises OverflowError if the long is too
  big to represent as a C double.

3874 3875 3876 3877 3878 3879
- The 3-argument builtin pow() no longer allows a third non-None argument
  if either of the first two arguments is a float, or if both are of
  integer types and the second argument is negative (in which latter case
  the arguments are converted to float, so this is really the same
  restriction).

3880 3881 3882 3883 3884 3885 3886 3887 3888 3889 3890 3891 3892 3893 3894 3895 3896
- The builtin dir() now returns more information, and sometimes much
  more, generally naming all attributes of an object, and all attributes
  reachable from the object via its class, and from its class's base
  classes, and so on from them too.  Example:  in 2.2a2, dir([]) returned
  an empty list.  In 2.2a3,

  >>> dir([])
  ['__add__', '__class__', '__contains__', '__delattr__', '__delitem__',
   '__eq__', '__ge__', '__getattr__', '__getitem__', '__getslice__',
   '__gt__', '__hash__', '__iadd__', '__imul__', '__init__', '__le__',
   '__len__', '__lt__', '__mul__', '__ne__', '__new__', '__repr__',
   '__rmul__', '__setattr__', '__setitem__', '__setslice__', '__str__',
   'append', 'count', 'extend', 'index', 'insert', 'pop', 'remove',
   'reverse', 'sort']

  dir(module) continues to return only the module's attributes, though.

3897
- Overflowing operations on plain ints now return a long int rather
3898 3899 3900 3901 3902
  than raising OverflowError.  This is a partial implementation of PEP
  237.  You can use -Wdefault::OverflowWarning to enable a warning for
  this situation, and -Werror::OverflowWarning to revert to the old
  OverflowError exception.

3903
- A new command line option, -Q<arg>, is added to control run-time
3904
  warnings for the use of classic division.  (See PEP 238.)  Possible
3905 3906 3907 3908 3909
  values are -Qold, -Qwarn, -Qwarnall, and -Qnew.  The default is
  -Qold, meaning the / operator has its classic meaning and no
  warnings are issued.  Using -Qwarn issues a run-time warning about
  all uses of classic division for int and long arguments; -Qwarnall
  also warns about classic division for float and complex arguments
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3910
  (for use with fixdiv.py).
3911 3912 3913 3914 3915 3916 3917
  [Note:  the remainder of this item (preserved below) became
  obsolete in 2.2c1 -- -Qnew has global effect in 2.2] ::

    Using -Qnew is questionable; it turns on new division by default, but
    only in the __main__ module.  You can usefully combine -Qwarn or
    -Qwarnall and -Qnew: this gives the __main__ module new division, and
    warns about classic division everywhere else.
3918

3919
- Many built-in types can now be subclassed.  This applies to int,
3920 3921 3922 3923 3924 3925 3926 3927 3928
  long, float, str, unicode, and tuple.  (The types complex, list and
  dictionary can also be subclassed; this was introduced earlier.)
  Note that restrictions apply when subclassing immutable built-in
  types: you can only affect the value of the instance by overloading
  __new__.  You can add mutable attributes, and the subclass instances
  will have a __dict__ attribute, but you cannot change the "value"
  (as implemented by the base class) of an immutable subclass instance
  once it is created.

3929 3930 3931 3932
- The dictionary constructor now takes an optional argument, a
  mapping-like object, and initializes the dictionary from its
  (key, value) pairs.

3933
- A new built-in type, super, has been added.  This facilitates making
3934 3935 3936
  "cooperative super calls" in a multiple inheritance setting.  For an
  explanation, see http://www.python.org/2.2/descrintro.html#cooperation

3937 3938 3939 3940 3941
- A new built-in type, property, has been added.  This enables the
  creation of "properties".  These are attributes implemented by
  getter and setter functions (or only one of these for read-only or
  write-only attributes), without the need to override __getattr__.
  See http://www.python.org/2.2/descrintro.html#property
3942

3943
- The syntax of floating-point and imaginary literals has been
3944 3945 3946 3947 3948
  liberalized, to allow leading zeroes.  Examples of literals now
  legal that were SyntaxErrors before:

      00.0    0e3   0100j   07.5   00000000000000000008.

3949
- An old tokenizer bug allowed floating point literals with an incomplete
3950 3951
  exponent, such as 1e and 3.1e-.  Such literals now raise SyntaxError.

3952
Library
3953
-------
3954

3955
- telnetlib includes symbolic names for the options, and support for
3956 3957
  setting an option negotiation callback. It also supports processing
  of suboptions.
3958

3959 3960 3961 3962 3963 3964 3965
- The new C standard no longer requires that math libraries set errno to
  ERANGE on overflow.  For platform libraries that exploit this new
  freedom, Python's overflow-checking was wholly broken.  A new overflow-
  checking scheme attempts to repair that, but may not be reliable on all
  platforms (C doesn't seem to provide anything both useful and portable
  in this area anymore).

3966 3967 3968
- Asynchronous timeout actions are available through the new class
  threading.Timer.

3969 3970 3971
- math.log and math.log10 now return sensible results for even huge
  long arguments.  For example, math.log10(10 ** 10000) ~= 10000.0.

3972
- A new function, imp.lock_held(), returns 1 when the import lock is
3973 3974
  currently held.  See the docs for the imp module.

3975
- pickle, cPickle and marshal on 32-bit platforms can now correctly read
3976 3977 3978 3979
  dumps containing ints written on platforms where Python ints are 8 bytes.
  When read on a box where Python ints are 4 bytes, such values are
  converted to Python longs.

3980
- In restricted execution mode (using the rexec module), unmarshalling
3981 3982
  code objects is no longer allowed.  This plugs a security hole.

3983 3984 3985 3986
- unittest.TestResult instances no longer store references to tracebacks
  generated by test failures. This prevents unexpected dangling references
  to objects that should be garbage collected between tests.

3987
Tools
3988
-----
3989

3990 3991 3992
- Tools/scripts/fixdiv.py has been added which can be used to fix
  division operators as per PEP 238.

3993
Build
3994
-----
3995

3996 3997 3998 3999 4000
- If you are an adventurous person using Mac OS X you may want to look at
  Mac/OSX. There is a Makefile there that will build Python as a real Mac
  application, which can be used for experimenting with Carbon or Cocoa.
  Discussion of this on pythonmac-sig, please.

4001
C API
4002
-----
4003 4004

- New function PyObject_Dir(obj), like Python __builtin__.dir(obj).
4005

4006 4007
- Note that PyLong_AsDouble can fail!  This has always been true, but no
  callers checked for it.  It's more likely to fail now, because overflow
4008
  errors are properly detected now.  The proper way to check::
4009

4010 4011
      double x = PyLong_AsDouble(some_long_object);
      if (x == -1.0 && PyErr_Occurred()) {
4012
              /* The conversion failed. */
4013
      }
4014

4015
- The GC API has been changed.  Extensions that use the old API will still
4016 4017 4018 4019
  compile but will not participate in GC.  To upgrade an extension
  module:

    - rename Py_TPFLAGS_GC to PyTPFLAGS_HAVE_GC
4020

4021 4022
    - use PyObject_GC_New or PyObject_GC_NewVar to allocate objects and
      PyObject_GC_Del to deallocate them
4023

4024 4025
    - rename PyObject_GC_Init to PyObject_GC_Track and PyObject_GC_Fini
      to PyObject_GC_UnTrack
4026

4027 4028 4029 4030
    - remove PyGC_HEAD_SIZE from object size calculations

    - remove calls to PyObject_AS_GC and PyObject_FROM_GC

4031
- Two new functions: PyString_FromFormat() and PyString_FromFormatV().
4032 4033 4034
  These can be used safely to construct string objects from a
  sprintf-style format string (similar to the format string supported
  by PyErr_Format()).
4035

4036
New platforms
4037
-------------
4038

4039 4040 4041 4042 4043
- Stephen Hansen contributed patches sufficient to get a clean compile
  under Borland C (Windows), but he reports problems running it and ran
  out of time to complete the port.  Volunteers?  Expect a MemoryError
  when importing the types module; this is probably shallow, and
  causing later failures too.
4044

4045
Tests
4046
-----
4047 4048

Windows
4049
-------
4050

4051 4052 4053 4054
- Large file support is now enabled on Win32 platforms as well as on
  Win64.  This means that, for example, you can use f.tell() and f.seek()
  to manipulate files larger than 2 gigabytes (provided you have enough
  disk space, and are using a Windows filesystem that supports large
4055 4056 4057 4058 4059
  partitions).  Windows filesystem limits:  FAT has a 2GB (gigabyte)
  filesize limit, and large file support makes no difference there.
  FAT32's limit is 4GB, and files >= 2GB are easier to use from Python now.
  NTFS has no practical limit on file size, and files of any size can be
  used from Python now.
4060

4061
- The w9xpopen hack is now used on Windows NT and 2000 too when COMPSPEC
4062 4063
  points to command.com (patch from Brian Quinlan).

4064

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4065 4066 4067
What's New in Python 2.2a2?
===========================

4068 4069
*Release Date: 22-Aug-2001*

4070
Build
4071
-----
4072

4073 4074 4075
- Tim Peters developed a brand new Windows installer using Wise 8.1,
  generously donated to us by Wise Solutions.

4076 4077 4078
- configure supports a new option --enable-unicode, with the values
  ucs2 and ucs4 (new in 2.2a1). With --disable-unicode, the Unicode
  type and supporting code is completely removed from the interpreter.
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4079

4080 4081 4082 4083
- A new configure option --enable-framework builds a Mac OS X framework,
  which "make frameworkinstall" will install. This provides a starting
  point for more mac-like functionality, join pythonmac-sig@python.org
  if you are interested in helping.
4084

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4085 4086
- The NeXT platform is no longer supported.

4087
- The 'new' module is now statically linked.
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4088

4089
Tools
4090
-----
4091 4092

- The new Tools/scripts/cleanfuture.py can be used to automatically
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4093
  edit out obsolete future statements from Python source code.  See
4094 4095
  the module docstring for details.

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4096
Tests
4097
-----
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4098

4099
- regrtest.py now knows which tests are expected to be skipped on some
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4100 4101 4102
  platforms, allowing to give clearer test result output.  regrtest
  also has optional --use/-u switch to run normally disabled tests
  which require network access or consume significant disk resources.
4103

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4104 4105 4106 4107
- Several new tests in the standard test suite, with special thanks to
  Nick Mathewson.

Core
4108
----
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4109

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4110 4111 4112 4113 4114 4115 4116 4117 4118
- The floor division operator // has been added as outlined in PEP
  238.  The / operator still provides classic division (and will until
  Python 3.0) unless "from __future__ import division" is included, in
  which case the / operator will provide true division.  The operator
  module provides truediv() and floordiv() functions.  Augmented
  assignment variants are included, as are the equivalent overloadable
  methods and C API methods.  See the PEP for a full discussion:
  <http://python.sf.net/peps/pep-0238.html>

4119 4120 4121 4122 4123
- Future statements are now effective in simulated interactive shells
  (like IDLE).  This should "just work" by magic, but read Michael
  Hudson's "Future statements in simulated shells" PEP 264 for full
  details:  <http://python.sf.net/peps/pep-0264.html>.

4124 4125 4126 4127 4128 4129
- The type/class unification (PEP 252-253) was integrated into the
  trunk and is not so tentative any more (the exact specification of
  some features is still tentative).  A lot of work has done on fixing
  bugs and adding robustness and features (performance still has to
  come a long way).

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4130 4131 4132 4133
- Warnings about a mismatch in the Python API during extension import
  now use the Python warning framework (which makes it possible to
  write filters for these warnings).

4134 4135 4136 4137 4138 4139
- A function's __dict__ (aka func_dict) will now always be a
  dictionary.  It used to be possible to delete it or set it to None,
  but now both actions raise TypeErrors.  It is still legal to set it
  to a dictionary object.  Getting func.__dict__ before any attributes
  have been assigned now returns an empty dictionary instead of None.

4140 4141 4142 4143 4144 4145 4146
- A new command line option, -E, was added which disables the use of
  all environment variables, or at least those that are specifically
  significant to Python.  Usually those have a name starting with
  "PYTHON".  This was used to fix a problem where the tests fail if
  the user happens to have PYTHONHOME or PYTHONPATH pointing to an
  older distribution.

4147
Library
4148
-------
4149

4150 4151
- New class Differ and new functions ndiff() and restore() in difflib.py.
  These package the algorithms used by the popular Tools/scripts/ndiff.py,
4152
  for programmatic reuse.
4153

4154 4155 4156 4157 4158 4159
- New function xml.sax.saxutils.quoteattr():  Quote an XML attribute
  value using the minimal quoting required for the value; more
  reliable than using xml.sax.saxutils.escape() for attribute values.

- Readline completion support for cmd.Cmd was added.

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- Calling os.tempnam() or os.tmpnam() generate RuntimeWarnings.

- Added function threading.BoundedSemaphore()

- Added Ka-Ping Yee's cgitb.py module.

4166
- The 'new' module now exposes the CO_xxx flags.
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4167

4168 4169
- The gc module offers the get_referents function.

4170
New platforms
4171
-------------
4172 4173

C API
4174
-----
4175

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4176 4177 4178 4179 4180 4181 4182
- Two new APIs PyOS_snprintf() and PyOS_vsnprintf() were added
  which provide a cross-platform implementations for the
  relatively new snprintf()/vsnprintf() C lib APIs. In contrast to
  the standard sprintf() and vsprintf() C lib APIs, these versions
  apply bounds checking on the used buffer which enhances protection
  against buffer overruns.

4183
- Unicode APIs now use name mangling to assure that mixing interpreters
4184 4185
  and extensions using different Unicode widths is rendered next to
  impossible. Trying to import an incompatible Unicode-aware extension
4186 4187 4188 4189
  will result in an ImportError.  Unicode extensions writers must make
  sure to check the Unicode width compatibility in their extensions by
  using at least one of the mangled Unicode APIs in the extension.

4190 4191 4192 4193 4194 4195
- Two new flags METH_NOARGS and METH_O are available in method definition
  tables to simplify implementation of methods with no arguments and a
  single untyped argument. Calling such methods is more efficient than
  calling corresponding METH_VARARGS methods. METH_OLDARGS is now
  deprecated.

4196
Windows
4197
-------
4198 4199 4200 4201

- "import module" now compiles module.pyw if it exists and nothing else
  relevant is found.

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4202

4203
What's New in Python 2.2a1?
4204 4205
===========================

4206 4207
*Release date: 18-Jul-2001*

4208
Core
4209
----
4210

4211 4212 4213 4214 4215 4216 4217 4218
- TENTATIVELY, a large amount of code implementing much of what's
  described in PEP 252 (Making Types Look More Like Classes) and PEP
  253 (Subtyping Built-in Types) was added.  This will be released
  with Python 2.2a1.  Documentation will be provided separately
  through http://www.python.org/2.2/.  The purpose of releasing this
  with Python 2.2a1 is to test backwards compatibility.  It is
  possible, though not likely, that a decision is made not to release
  this code as part of 2.2 final, if any serious backwards
4219
  incompatibilities are found during alpha testing that cannot be
4220 4221
  repaired.

4222
- Generators were added; this is a new way to create an iterator (see
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4223
  below) using what looks like a simple function containing one or
4224 4225 4226 4227 4228 4229 4230 4231 4232
  more 'yield' statements.  See PEP 255.  Since this adds a new
  keyword to the language, this feature must be enabled by including a
  future statement: "from __future__ import generators" (see PEP 236).
  Generators will become a standard feature in a future release
  (probably 2.3).  Without this future statement, 'yield' remains an
  ordinary identifier, but a warning is issued each time it is used.
  (These warnings currently don't conform to the warnings framework of
  PEP 230; we intend to fix this in 2.2a2.)

4233 4234 4235 4236 4237
- The UTF-16 codec was modified to be more RFC compliant. It will now
  only remove BOM characters at the start of the string and then
  only if running in native mode (UTF-16-LE and -BE won't remove a
  leading BMO character).

4238 4239 4240 4241 4242 4243 4244
- Strings now have a new method .decode() to complement the already
  existing .encode() method. These two methods provide direct access
  to the corresponding decoders and encoders of the registered codecs.

  To enhance the usability of the .encode() method, the special
  casing of Unicode object return values was dropped (Unicode objects
  were auto-magically converted to string using the default encoding).
4245

4246 4247 4248 4249 4250 4251 4252 4253 4254
  Both methods will now return whatever the codec in charge of the
  requested encoding returns as object, e.g. Unicode codecs will
  return Unicode objects when decoding is requested ("äöü".decode("latin-1")
  will return u"äöü"). This enables codec writer to create codecs
  for various simple to use conversions.

  New codecs were added to demonstrate these new features (the .encode()
  and .decode() columns indicate the type of the returned objects):

4255 4256 4257 4258 4259 4260 4261 4262 4263 4264 4265 4266 4267 4268 4269
  +---------+-----------+-----------+-----------------------------+
  |Name     | .encode() | .decode() | Description                 |
  +=========+===========+===========+=============================+
  |uu       | string    | string    | UU codec (e.g. for email)   |
  +---------+-----------+-----------+-----------------------------+
  |base64   | string    | string    | base64 codec                |
  +---------+-----------+-----------+-----------------------------+
  |quopri   | string    | string    | quoted-printable codec      |
  +---------+-----------+-----------+-----------------------------+
  |zlib     | string    | string    | zlib compression            |
  +---------+-----------+-----------+-----------------------------+
  |hex      | string    | string    | 2-byte hex codec            |
  +---------+-----------+-----------+-----------------------------+
  |rot-13   | string    | Unicode   | ROT-13 Unicode charmap codec|
  +---------+-----------+-----------+-----------------------------+
4270

4271 4272 4273
- Some operating systems now support the concept of a default Unicode
  encoding for file system operations.  Notably, Windows supports 'mbcs'
  as the default.  The Macintosh will also adopt this concept in the medium
4274
  term, although the default encoding for that platform will be other than
4275
  'mbcs'.
4276 4277

  On operating system that support non-ASCII filenames, it is common for
4278 4279 4280 4281 4282
  functions that return filenames (such as os.listdir()) to return Python
  string objects pre-encoded using the default file system encoding for
  the platform.  As this encoding is likely to be different from Python's
  default encoding, converting this name to a Unicode object before passing
  it back to the Operating System would result in a Unicode error, as Python
4283 4284
  would attempt to use its default encoding (generally ASCII) rather than
  the default encoding for the file system.
4285

4286 4287 4288
  In general, this change simply removes surprises when working with
  Unicode and the file system, making these operations work as you expect,
  increasing the transparency of Unicode objects in this context.
4289
  See [????] for more details, including examples.
4290

4291 4292 4293 4294 4295 4296 4297 4298 4299 4300 4301 4302 4303 4304 4305 4306 4307 4308 4309 4310
- Float (and complex) literals in source code were evaluated to full
  precision only when running from a .py file; the same code loaded from a
  .pyc (or .pyo) file could suffer numeric differences starting at about the
  12th significant decimal digit.  For example, on a machine with IEEE-754
  floating arithmetic,

      x = 9007199254740992.0
      print long(x)

  printed 9007199254740992 if run directly from .py, but 9007199254740000
  if from a compiled (.pyc or .pyo) file.  This was due to marshal using
  str(float) instead of repr(float) when building code objects.  marshal
  now uses repr(float) instead, which should reproduce floats to full
  machine precision (assuming the platform C float<->string I/O conversion
  functions are of good quality).

  This may cause floating-point results to change in some cases, and
  usually for the better, but may also cause numerically unstable
  algorithms to break.

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- The implementation of dicts suffers fewer collisions, which has speed
  benefits.  However, the order in which dict entries appear in dict.keys(),
  dict.values() and dict.items() may differ from previous releases for a
  given dict.  Nothing is defined about this order, so no program should
  rely on it.  Nevertheless, it's easy to write test cases that rely on the
  order by accident, typically because of printing the str() or repr() of a
  dict to an "expected results" file.  See Lib/test/test_support.py's new
  sortdict(dict) function for a simple way to display a dict in sorted
  order.

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- Many other small changes to dicts were made, resulting in faster
  operation along the most common code paths.

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- Dictionary objects now support the "in" operator: "x in dict" means
  the same as dict.has_key(x).

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- The update() method of dictionaries now accepts generic mapping
  objects.  Specifically the argument object must support the .keys()
  and __getitem__() methods.  This allows you to say, for example,
  {}.update(UserDict())

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- Iterators were added; this is a generalized way of providing values
  to a for loop.  See PEP 234.  There's a new built-in function iter()
  to return an iterator.  There's a new protocol to get the next value
  from an iterator using the next() method (in Python) or the
  tp_iternext slot (in C).  There's a new protocol to get iterators
  using the __iter__() method (in Python) or the tp_iter slot (in C).
  Iterating (i.e. a for loop) over a dictionary generates its keys.
  Iterating over a file generates its lines.

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- The following functions were generalized to work nicely with iterator
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  arguments::
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    map(), filter(), reduce(), zip()
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    list(), tuple() (PySequence_Tuple() and PySequence_Fast() in C API)
    max(), min()
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    join() method of strings
    extend() method of lists
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    'x in y' and 'x not in y' (PySequence_Contains() in C API)
    operator.countOf() (PySequence_Count() in C API)
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    right-hand side of assignment statements with multiple targets, such as ::
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        x, y, z = some_iterable_object_returning_exactly_3_values
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- Accessing module attributes is significantly faster (for example,
  random.random or os.path or yourPythonModule.yourAttribute).

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- Comparing dictionary objects via == and != is faster, and now works even
  if the keys and values don't support comparisons other than ==.

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- Comparing dictionaries in ways other than == and != is slower:  there were
  insecurities in the dict comparison implementation that could cause Python
  to crash if the element comparison routines for the dict keys and/or
  values mutated the dicts.  Making the code bulletproof slowed it down.

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- Collisions in dicts are resolved via a new approach, which can help
  dramatically in bad cases.  For example, looking up every key in a dict
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  d with d.keys() == [i << 16 for i in range(20000)] is approximately 500x
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  faster now.  Thanks to Christian Tismer for pointing out the cause and
  the nature of an effective cure (last December! better late than never).
4370

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- repr() is much faster for large containers (dict, list, tuple).


4374
Library
4375
-------
4376

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- The constants ascii_letters, ascii_lowercase. and ascii_uppercase
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  were added to the string module.  These a locale-independent
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  constants, unlike letters, lowercase, and uppercase.  These are now
  use in appropriate locations in the standard library.

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- The flags used in dlopen calls can now be configured using
  sys.setdlopenflags and queried using sys.getdlopenflags.

Guido van Rossum's avatar
Guido van Rossum committed
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- Fredrik Lundh's xmlrpclib is now a standard library module.  This
  provides full client-side XML-RPC support.  In addition,
  Demo/xmlrpc/ contains two server frameworks (one SocketServer-based,
  one asyncore-based).  Thanks to Eric Raymond for the documentation.

Guido van Rossum's avatar
Guido van Rossum committed
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- The xrange() object is simplified: it no longer supports slicing,
  repetition, comparisons, efficient 'in' checking, the tolist()
  method, or the start, stop and step attributes.  See PEP 260.

Martin v. Löwis's avatar
Martin v. Löwis committed
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- A new function fnmatch.filter to filter lists of file names was added.

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- calendar.py uses month and day names based on the current locale.

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- strop is now *really* obsolete (this was announced before with 1.6),
  and issues DeprecationWarning when used (except for the four items
  that are still imported into string.py).

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- Cookie.py now sorts key+value pairs by key in output strings.

- pprint.isrecursive(object) didn't correctly identify recursive objects.
  Now it does.

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- pprint functions now much faster for large containers (tuple, list, dict).

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- New 'q' and 'Q' format codes in the struct module, corresponding to C
  types "long long" and "unsigned long long" (on Windows, __int64).  In
  native mode, these can be used only when the platform C compiler supports
  these types (when HAVE_LONG_LONG is #define'd by the Python config
  process), and then they inherit the sizes and alignments of the C types.
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  In standard mode, 'q' and 'Q' are supported on all platforms, and are
  8-byte integral types.
4416

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- The site module installs a new built-in function 'help' that invokes
  pydoc.help.  It must be invoked as 'help()'; when invoked as 'help',
  it displays a message reminding the user to use 'help()' or
  'help(object)'.

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Tests
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-----
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- New test_mutants.py runs dict comparisons where the key and value
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  comparison operators mutate the dicts randomly during comparison.  This
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  rapidly causes Python to crash under earlier releases (not for the faint
  of heart:  it can also cause Win9x to freeze or reboot!).

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- New test_pprint.py verifies that pprint.isrecursive() and
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  pprint.isreadable() return sensible results.  Also verifies that simple
  cases produce correct output.
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4434
C API
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-----
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- Removed the unused last_is_sticky argument from the internal
  _PyTuple_Resize().  If this affects you, you were cheating.
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----

**(For information about older versions, consult the HISTORY file.)**