python-peps/pep-0200.txt

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PEP: 200
Title: Python 2.0 Release Schedule
Version: $Revision$
Owner: Jeremy Hylton <jeremy@beopen.com>
Python-Version: 2.0
Status: Incomplete
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Introduction
This PEP describes the Python 2.0 release schedule, tracking the
status and ownership of the major new features, summarizes
discussions held in mailing list forums, and provides URLs for
further information, patches, and other outstanding issues. The
CVS revision history of this file contains the definitive
historical record.
Tentative Release Schedule
Aug. 14: All 2.0 PEPs finished / feature freeze
Aug. 28: 2.0 beta 1
Sep. 29: 2.0 final
Guidelines for submitting patches and making changes
Use good sense when committing changes. You should know what we
mean by good sense or we wouldn't have given you commit privileges
<0.5 wink>. Some specific examples of good sense include:
- Do whatever the dictator tells you.
- Discuss any controversial changes on python-dev first. If you
get a lot of +1 votes and no -1 votes, make the change. If you
get a some -1 votes, think twice; consider asking Guido what he
thinks.
- If the change is to code you contributed, it probably makes
sense for you to fix it.
- If the change affects code someone else wrote, it probably makes
sense to ask him or her first.
- You can use the SF Patch Manager to submit a patch and assign it
to someone for review.
Any significant new feature must be described in a PEP and
approved before it is checked in.
Any significant code addition, such as a new module or large
patch, must include test cases for the regression test and
documentation. A patch should not be checked in until the tests
and documentation are ready.
If you fix a bug, you should write a test case that would have
caught the bug.
If you commit a patch from the SF Patch Manager or fix a bug from
the Jitterbug database, be sure to reference the patch/bug number
in the CVS log message. Also be sure to change the status in the
patch manager or bug database (if you have access to the bug
database).
It is not acceptable for any checked in code to cause the
regression test to fail. If a checkin causes a failure, it must
be fixed within 24 hours or it will be backed out.
All contributed C code must be ANSI C. If possible check it with
two different compilers, e.g. gcc and MSVC.
All contributed Python code must follow Guido's Python style
guide. http://www.python.org/doc/essays/styleguide.html
It is understood that any code contributed will be released under
an Open Source license. Do not contribute code if it can't be
released this way.
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Accepted and completed
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Accepted and in progress
* SyntaxError enhancements - Fredrik Lundh
http://www.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2000-July/012981.html
* interface to poll system call - Andrew Kuchling
An OO interface to the poll system call will be added to the
select module.
* Compression of Unicode database - Fredrik Lundh
http://hem.passagen.se/eff/bot.htm#456806
* SRE - Fredrik Lundh
The test suite still fails on test_re.
* PyErr_SafeFormat / snprintf - owner???
Use snprintf to avoid buffer overflows. Need configure hackery
to discovery if it is available on the current platform and a
default implementation if it is not.
http://www.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2000-April/010051.html
* Support for opcode arguments > 2**16 - Charles Waldman
Source files longer than 32K and sequences with more than 32K
elements both fail because opcode arguments are limited to
16-bit values.
* Range literals - Thomas Wouters
Make range(1, 10, 2) == [1:10:2]
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Open: proposed but not accepted or declined
* List comprehensions - Tim Peters?
Need a coherent proposal. Lots of confusing discussion going
on.
* Eliminated SET_LINENO opcode - Vladimir Marangozov
Small optimization achieved by using the code object's lnotab
instead of the SET_LINENO instruction. Uses code rewriting
technique (that Guido's frowns on) to support debugger, which
uses SET_LINENO.
http://starship.python.net/~vlad/lineno/
for (working at the time) patches
Discussions on python-dev:
- http://www.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2000-April/subject.html
Subject: "Why do we need Traceback Objects?"
- http://www.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/1999-August/002252.html
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Declined
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