Skip to content
Projects
Groups
Snippets
Help
Loading...
Help
Support
Keyboard shortcuts
?
Submit feedback
Contribute to GitLab
Sign in / Register
Toggle navigation
C
cpython
Project overview
Project overview
Details
Activity
Releases
Repository
Repository
Files
Commits
Branches
Tags
Contributors
Graph
Compare
Issues
0
Issues
0
List
Boards
Labels
Milestones
Merge Requests
0
Merge Requests
0
Analytics
Analytics
Repository
Value Stream
Wiki
Wiki
Members
Members
Collapse sidebar
Close sidebar
Activity
Graph
Create a new issue
Commits
Issue Boards
Open sidebar
Kirill Smelkov
cpython
Commits
23ab1016
Commit
23ab1016
authored
Jan 18, 2011
by
Raymond Hettinger
Browse files
Options
Browse Files
Download
Email Patches
Plain Diff
Reword the OrderedDict entry to emphasize the default behavior,
to show equivalent code, and to provide a use case.
parent
ad62b039
Changes
1
Hide whitespace changes
Inline
Side-by-side
Showing
1 changed file
with
12 additions
and
10 deletions
+12
-10
Doc/whatsnew/3.2.rst
Doc/whatsnew/3.2.rst
+12
-10
No files found.
Doc/whatsnew/3.2.rst
View file @
23ab1016
...
...
@@ -798,19 +798,21 @@ collections
* The :class:`collections.OrderedDict` class has a new method
:meth:`~collections.OrderedDict.move_to_end` which takes an existing key and
moves it to either the beginning or end of an ordered sequence. When the
dictionary sequence is being used as a queue, these operations correspond to
"move to the front of the line" or "move to the back of the line":
moves it to either the first or last position in the ordered sequence.
The default is to move an item to the last position. This is equivalent of
renewing an entry with ``od[k] = od.pop(k)``.
A fast move-to-end operation is useful for resequencing entries. For example,
an ordered dictionary can being used to track access order by aging entries
from oldest to most recently accessed.
>>> d = OrderedDict.fromkeys(['a', 'b', 'X', 'd', 'e'])
>>> list(d)
['a', 'b', 'X', 'd', 'e']
>>> d.move_to_end('X'
, last=True
)
>>> d.move_to_end('X')
>>> list(d)
['a', 'b', 'd', 'e', 'X']
>>> d.move_to_end('X', last=False)
>>> list(d)
['X', 'a', 'b', 'd', 'e']
(Contributed by Raymond Hettinger.)
...
...
@@ -1683,11 +1685,11 @@ The :mod:`os` module has two new functions: :func:`~os.fsencode` and
:data:`os.environ`, :func:`os.getenvb` function and
:data:`os.supports_bytes_environ` constant.
``'mbcs'``
encoding doesn't ignore the error handler argument any more. By
MBCS
encoding doesn't ignore the error handler argument any more. By
default (strict mode), it raises an UnicodeDecodeError on undecodable byte
sequence and UnicodeEncodeError on unencodable character. To get the
``'mbcs'``
sequence and UnicodeEncodeError on unencodable character. To get the
MBCS
encoding of Python 3.1, use ``'ignore'`` error handler to decode and
``'replace'`` error handler to encode.
``'mbcs'``
supports ``'strict'`` and
``'replace'`` error handler to encode.
The MBCS codec
supports ``'strict'`` and
``'ignore'`` error handlers for decoding, and ``'strict'`` and ``'replace'``
for encoding.
...
...
Write
Preview
Markdown
is supported
0%
Try again
or
attach a new file
Attach a file
Cancel
You are about to add
0
people
to the discussion. Proceed with caution.
Finish editing this message first!
Cancel
Please
register
or
sign in
to comment