- 31 Dec, 1996 7 commits
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Guido van Rossum authored
Use TestFailed exception and verbose flag from test_support module.
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Guido van Rossum authored
unpack('L', ...) is now acceptable to pack('L', ...).
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Guido van Rossum authored
module. (Small problem: struct.pack() won't deal with the Python long ints returned by struct.unpack() for the 'L' format. Worked around that for now.)
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Guido van Rossum authored
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Guido van Rossum authored
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Guido van Rossum authored
should be memset().
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Guido van Rossum authored
-- The whole implementation is now more table-driven. -- Unsigned integers. Format characters 'B', 'H', 'I' and 'L' mean unsigned byte, short, int and long. For 'I' and 'L', the return value is a Python long integer if a Python plain integer can't represent the required range (note: this is dependent on the size of the relevant C types only, not of the sign of the actual value). -- A new format character 's' packs/unpacks a string. When given a count prefix, this is the size of the string, not a repeat count like for the other format characters; e.g. '10s' means a single 10-byte string, while '10c' means 10 characters. For packing, the string is truncated or padded with null bytes as appropriate to make it fit. For unpacking, the resulting string always has exactly the specified number of bytes. As a special case, '0s' means a single, empty string (while '0c' means 0 characters). -- Various byte order options. The first character of the format string determines the byte order, size and alignment, as follows: First character Byte order size and alignment '@' native native '=' native standard '<' little-endian standard '>' big-endian standard '!' network (= big-endian) standard If the first character is not one of these, '@' is assumed. Native byte order is big-endian or little-endian, depending on the host system (e.g. Motorola and Sun are big-endian; Intel and DEC are little-endian). Native size and alignment are determined using the C compiler's sizeof expression. This is always combined with native byte order. Standard size and alignment are as follows: no alignment is required for any type (so you have to use pad bytes); short is 2 bytes; int and long are 4 bytes. In this mode, there is no support for float and double. Note the difference between '@' and '=': both use native byte order, but the size and alignment of the latter is standardized. The form '!' is available for those poor souls who can't remember whether network byte order is big-endian or little-endian. There is no way to indicate non-native byte order (i.e. force byte-swapping); use the appropriate choice of '<' or '>'.
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- 30 Dec, 1996 4 commits
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Guido van Rossum authored
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Guido van Rossum authored
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Guido van Rossum authored
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Guido van Rossum authored
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- 29 Dec, 1996 1 commit
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Guido van Rossum authored
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- 27 Dec, 1996 5 commits
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Guido van Rossum authored
(such as Netscape-Commerce and CERN). An example of a RFC 850 date: 'Wednesday, 18-Dec-96 21:00:00 GMT' From: Chris Lawrence <quango@themall.net>
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Guido van Rossum authored
Added unbind() to CanvasItem and Group classes.
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Guido van Rossum authored
(Fred Drake)
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Guido van Rossum authored
were strings, accidentally).
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Guido van Rossum authored
(Fred Drake.)
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- 25 Dec, 1996 1 commit
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Guido van Rossum authored
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- 24 Dec, 1996 3 commits
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Roger E. Masse authored
However: "cgensupport.h" is still present... otherwise I get maaaany type errors... not sure if this needs more attention.
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Roger E. Masse authored
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Roger E. Masse authored
all the modules attributes are present and creates a small criss-cross window for 5 seconds (example from the documentation :-) A more comprehensive test would probably be useful... but maybe overkill.
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- 23 Dec, 1996 14 commits
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Barry Warsaw authored
test_rotor.py: New test of the rotor module. test_*: converted to the new test harness. GvR note! test_signal.py works interatively (i.e. when verbose=1) but does not work inside the test harness. It must be a timing issue, but I haven't figured it out yet.
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Barry Warsaw authored
test_*: converted to the new test harness. GvR note! test_signal.py works interatively (i.e. when verbose=1) but does not work inside the test harness. It must be a timing issue, but I haven't figured it out yet.
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Barry Warsaw authored
non-checked error return values, and where appropriate, PyArg_ParseTuple() style argument parsing. I also changed some function names and converted all malloc/free calls to PyMem_NEW/PyMem_DEL. Some stylistic changes and formatting standardization.
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Barry Warsaw authored
take an optional string key, but if key is not given, the method does nothing! In the rewrite (see upcoming check-in), I left things this way, but here I document that this is the case.
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Jack Jansen authored
- Changed instructions for Tcl 7.6/Tk 4.2
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Jack Jansen authored
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Jack Jansen authored
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Jack Jansen authored
themselves and returns true if they did.
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Jack Jansen authored
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Jack Jansen authored
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Jack Jansen authored
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Jack Jansen authored
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Jack Jansen authored
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Jack Jansen authored
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- 20 Dec, 1996 5 commits
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Roger E. Masse authored
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Roger E. Masse authored
'verbose' flag ala GvR updated test harness architecture. Old way: verbose = 0 if __name__ == '__main__': verbose = 1 New way: from test_support import verbose Some other small readablility and functionality updates.
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Barry Warsaw authored
[NOTE: testall.py and autotest.py might could go away soon, I've played with Guido's new regrtest.py script and it seems to work well. I'll wait until Guido gives the word to completely switch over -- and change the Makefile too!]
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Roger E. Masse authored
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Barry Warsaw authored
- Where optional arguments were being used, converted to PyArg_ParseTuple() style instead of nested PyArg_Parse() style. - Check for and handle many potential error conditions that were never being tested. - internal reg_* functions renamed to regobj_* (makes it easier to figure out which are global regex functions and which are for regex objects). - reg_group (now regobj_group) was quite extensively reworked. it no longer recurses to do its job (by factoring core functionality into a separate function that knows about string and integer indexes). - some minor formatting fixes. - regex_set_syntax() now invalidates the cache. Without this change (in the example below), the second search would produce different output depending on whether the first search were performed or not (since performing the first search would cache the compiled object with RE_SYNTAX_EMACS, causing the second test to unexpectedly fail). regex.search('(a+)|(b+)', 'cdb') prev = regex.set_syntax(RE_SYNTAX_AWK) regex.search('(a+)|(b+)', 'cdb')
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