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Kirill Smelkov
cpython
Commits
e9a0732c
Commit
e9a0732c
authored
Apr 27, 1997
by
Guido van Rossum
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Note that passing a filename to uu.{en,de}code() is deprecated.
parent
e76b7a8f
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Doc/lib/libbinascii.tex
Doc/lib/libbinascii.tex
+8
-9
Doc/libbinascii.tex
Doc/libbinascii.tex
+8
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Doc/lib/libbinascii.tex
View file @
e9a0732c
...
...
@@ -18,7 +18,7 @@ method).
\end{funcdesc}
\begin{funcdesc}
{
hexbin
}{
input
\optional
{
\,
output
}}
Decode a binhex file
\var
{
input
}
.
\var
{
I
nput
}
may be a filename or a
Decode a binhex file
\var
{
input
}
.
\var
{
i
nput
}
may be a filename or a
file-like object supporting
\var
{
read
}
and
\var
{
close
}
methods.
The resulting file is written to a file named
\var
{
output
}
, unless the
argument is empty in which case the output filename is read from the
...
...
@@ -40,14 +40,13 @@ As of this writing, \var{hexbin} appears to not work in all cases.
This module encodes and decodes files in uuencode format, allowing
arbitrary binary data to be transferred over ascii-only connections.
Whereever a file argument is expected, the methods accept either a
pathname (
\code
{
'-'
}
for stdin/stdout) or a file-like object.
Normally you would pass filenames, but there is one case where you
have to open the file yourself: if you are on a non-unix platform and
your binary file is actually a textfile that you want encoded
unix-compatible you will have to open the file yourself as a textfile,
so newline conversion is performed.
Wherever a file argument is expected, the methods accept a file-like
object. For backwards compatibility, a string containing a pathname
is also accepted, and the corresponding file will be opened for
reading and writing; the pathname
\code
{
'-'
}
is understood to mean the
standard input or output. However, this interface is deprecated; it's
better for the caller to open the file itself, and be sure that, when
required, the mode is
\code
{
'rb'
}
or
\code
{
'wb'
}
on Windows or DOS.
This code was contributed by Lance Ellinghouse, and modified by Jack
Jansen.
...
...
Doc/libbinascii.tex
View file @
e9a0732c
...
...
@@ -18,7 +18,7 @@ method).
\end{funcdesc}
\begin{funcdesc}
{
hexbin
}{
input
\optional
{
\,
output
}}
Decode a binhex file
\var
{
input
}
.
\var
{
I
nput
}
may be a filename or a
Decode a binhex file
\var
{
input
}
.
\var
{
i
nput
}
may be a filename or a
file-like object supporting
\var
{
read
}
and
\var
{
close
}
methods.
The resulting file is written to a file named
\var
{
output
}
, unless the
argument is empty in which case the output filename is read from the
...
...
@@ -40,14 +40,13 @@ As of this writing, \var{hexbin} appears to not work in all cases.
This module encodes and decodes files in uuencode format, allowing
arbitrary binary data to be transferred over ascii-only connections.
Whereever a file argument is expected, the methods accept either a
pathname (
\code
{
'-'
}
for stdin/stdout) or a file-like object.
Normally you would pass filenames, but there is one case where you
have to open the file yourself: if you are on a non-unix platform and
your binary file is actually a textfile that you want encoded
unix-compatible you will have to open the file yourself as a textfile,
so newline conversion is performed.
Wherever a file argument is expected, the methods accept a file-like
object. For backwards compatibility, a string containing a pathname
is also accepted, and the corresponding file will be opened for
reading and writing; the pathname
\code
{
'-'
}
is understood to mean the
standard input or output. However, this interface is deprecated; it's
better for the caller to open the file itself, and be sure that, when
required, the mode is
\code
{
'rb'
}
or
\code
{
'wb'
}
on Windows or DOS.
This code was contributed by Lance Ellinghouse, and modified by Jack
Jansen.
...
...
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