198 lines
8.5 KiB
Plaintext
198 lines
8.5 KiB
Plaintext
PEP: 278
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Title: Universal Newline Support
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Version: $Revision$
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Last-Modified: $Date$
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Author: jack@cwi.nl (Jack Jansen)
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Status: Draft
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Type: Standards Track
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Created: 14-Jan-2002
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Python-Version: 2.3
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Post-History:
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Abstract
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This PEP discusses a way in which Python can support I/O on files
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which have a newline format that is not the native format on the
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platform, so that Python on each platform can read and import
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files with CR (Macintosh), LF (Unix) or CR LF (Windows) line
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endings.
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It is more and more common to come across files that have an end
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of line that does not match the standard on the current platform:
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files downloaded over the net, remotely mounted filesystems on a
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different platform, Mac OS X with its double standard of Mac and
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Unix line endings, etc.
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Many tools such as editors and compilers already handle this
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gracefully, it would be good if Python did so too.
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Specification
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Universal newline support is enabled by default,
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but can be disabled during the configure of Python.
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In a Python with universal newline support the feature is
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automatically enabled for all import statements and execfile()
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calls. There is no special support for eval() or exec.
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In a Python with universal newline support open() the mode
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parameter can also be "U", meaning "open for input as a text file
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with universal newline interpretation". Mode "rU" is also allowed,
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for symmetry with "rb". Mode "U" cannot be
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combined with other mode flags such as "+". Any line ending in the
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input file will be seen as a '\n' in Python, so little other code has
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to change to handle universal newlines.
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Conversion of newlines happens in all calls that read data: read(),
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readline(), readlines(), etc.
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There is no special support for output to file with a different
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newline convention, and so mode "wU" is also illegal.
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A file object that has been opened in universal newline mode gets
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a new attribute "newlines" which reflects the newline convention
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used in the file. The value for this attribute is one of None (no
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newline read yet), "\r", "\n", "\r\n" or a tuple containing all the
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newline types seen.
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Rationale
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Universal newline support is implemented in C, not in Python.
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This is done because we want files with a foreign newline
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convention to be import-able, so a Python Lib directory can be
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shared over a remote file system connection, or between MacPython
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and Unix-Python on Mac OS X. For this to be feasible the
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universal newline convention needs to have a reasonably small
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impact on performance, which means a Python implementation is not
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an option as it would bog down all imports. And because of files
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with multiple newline conventions, which Visual C++ and other
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Windows tools will happily produce, doing a quick check for the
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newlines used in a file (handing off the import to C code if a
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platform-local newline is seen) will not work. Finally, a C
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implementation also allows tracebacks and such (which open the
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Python source module) to be handled easily.
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There is no output implementation of universal newlines, Python
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programs are expected to handle this by themselves or write files
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with platform-local convention otherwise. The reason for this is
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that input is the difficult case, outputting different newlines to
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a file is already easy enough in Python.
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Also, an output implementation would be much more difficult than an
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input implementation, surprisingly: a lot of output is done through
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PyXXX_Print() methods, and at this point the file object is not
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available anymore, only a FILE *. So, an output implementation would
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need to somehow go from the FILE* to the file object, because that
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is where the current newline delimiter is stored.
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The input implementation has no such problem: there are no cases in
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the Python source tree where files are partially read from C,
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partially from Python, and such cases are expected to be rare in
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extension modules. If such cases exist the only problem is that the
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newlines attribute of the file object is not updated during the
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fread() or fgets() calls that are done direct from C.
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A partial output implementation, where strings passed to fp.write()
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would be converted to use fp.newlines as their line terminator but
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all other output would not is far too surprising, in my view.
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Because there is no output support for universal newlines there is
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also no support for a mode "rU+": the surprise factor of the
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previous paragraph would hold to an even stronger degree.
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There is no support for universal newlines in strings passed to
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eval() or exec. It is envisioned that such strings always have the
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standard \n line feed, if the strings come from a file that file can
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be read with universal newlines.
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I think there are no special issues with unicode. utf-16 shouldn't
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pose any new problems, as such files need to be opened in binary
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mode anyway. Interaction with utf-8 is fine too: values 0x0a and 0x0d
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cannot occur as part of a multibyte sequence.
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Universal newline files should work fine with iterators and
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xreadlines() as these eventually call the normal file
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readline/readlines methods.
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While universal newlines are automatically enabled for import they
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are not for opening, where you have to specifically say open(...,
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"U"). This is open to debate, but here are a few reasons for this
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design:
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- Compatibility. Programs which already do their own
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interpretation of \r\n in text files would break. Examples of such
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programs would be editors which warn you when you open a file with
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a different newline convention. If universal newlines was made the
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default such an editor would silently convert your line endings to
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the local convention on save. Programs which open binary files as
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text files on Unix would also break (but it could be argued they
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deserve it :-).
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- Interface clarity. Universal newlines are only supported for
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input files, not for input/output files, as the semantics would
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become muddy. Would you write Mac newlines if all reads so far
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had encountered Mac newlines? But what if you then later read a
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Unix newline?
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The newlines attribute is included so that programs that really
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care about the newline convention, such as text editors, can
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examine what was in a file. They can then save (a copy of) the
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file with the same newline convention (or, in case of a file with
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mixed newlines, ask the user what to do, or output in platform
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convention).
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Feedback is explicitly solicited on one item in the reference
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implementation: whether or not the universal newlines routines
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should grab the global interpreter lock. Currently they do not,
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but this could be considered living dangerously, as they may
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modify fields in a FileObject. But as these routines are
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replacements for fgets() and fread() as well it may be difficult
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to decide whether or not the lock is held when the routine is
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called. Moreover, the only danger is that if two threads read the
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same FileObject at the same time an extraneous newline may be seen
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or the "newlines" attribute may inadvertently be set to mixed. I
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would argue that if you read the same FileObject in two threads
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simultaneously you are asking for trouble anyway.
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Note that no globally accessible pointers are manipulated in the
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fgets() or fread() replacement routines, just some integer-valued
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flags, so the chances of core dumps are zero (he said:-).
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Universal newline support can be disabled during configure because it does
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have a small performance penalty, and moreover the implementation has
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not been tested on all concievable platforms yet. It might also be silly
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on some platforms (WinCE or Palm devices, for instance). If universal
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newline support is not enabled then file objects do not have the "newlines"
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attribute, so testing whether the current Python has it can be done with a
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simple
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if hasattr(sys.stdout, 'newlines'):
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print 'We have universal newline support'
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Reference Implementation
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A reference implementation is available in SourceForge patch
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#476814: http://www.python.org/sf/476814
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References
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None.
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Copyright
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This document has been placed in the public domain.
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Local Variables:
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mode: indented-text
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indent-tabs-mode: nil
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fill-column: 70
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End:
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