230 lines
8.5 KiB
Plaintext
230 lines
8.5 KiB
Plaintext
PEP: 467
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Title: Minor API improvements for binary sequences
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Version: $Revision$
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Last-Modified: $Date$
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Author: Nick Coghlan <ncoghlan@gmail.com>, Ethan Furman <ethan@stoneleaf.us>
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Status: Draft
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Type: Standards Track
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Content-Type: text/x-rst
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Created: 30-Mar-2014
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Python-Version: 3.11
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Post-History: 2014-03-30 2014-08-15 2014-08-16 2016-06-07 2016-09-01 2021-04-13
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Abstract
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========
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During the initial development of the Python 3 language specification, the
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core ``bytes`` type for arbitrary binary data started as the mutable type
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that is now referred to as ``bytearray``. Other aspects of operating in
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the binary domain in Python have also evolved over the course of the Python
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3 series.
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This PEP proposes five small adjustments to the APIs of the ``bytes`` and
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``bytearray`` types to make it easier to operate entirely in the binary domain:
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* Discourage passing single integer values to ``bytes`` and ``bytearray``
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* Add ``bytes.fromsize`` and ``bytearray.fromsize`` alternative constructors
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* Add ``bytes.fromint`` and ``bytearray.fromint`` alternative constructors
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* Add ``bytes.getbyte`` and ``bytearray.getbyte`` byte retrieval methods
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* Add ``bytes.iterbytes`` and ``bytearray.iterbytes`` alternative iterators
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Proposals
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=========
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Discourage use of current "zero-initialised sequence" behavior
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---------------------------------------------------------------
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Currently, the ``bytes`` and ``bytearray`` constructors accept an integer
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argument and interpret it as meaning to create a zero-initialised sequence
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of the given size::
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>>> bytes(3)
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b'\x00\x00\x00'
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>>> bytearray(3)
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bytearray(b'\x00\x00\x00')
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This PEP proposes to update the documentation to discourage making use of that
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input type dependent behavior in Python 3.11, suggesting to use a new, more
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explicit, ``bytes.fromsize(n)`` or ``bytearray.fromsize(n)`` spelling instead
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(see next section).
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However, the current handling of numeric inputs in the default constructors
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would remain in place indefinitely to avoid introducing a compatibility break.
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No other changes are proposed to the existing constructors.
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Addition of explicit "count and byte initialised sequence" constructors
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------
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To replace the now discouraged behavior, this PEP proposes the addition of an
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explicit ``fromsize`` alternative constructor as a class method on both
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``bytes`` and ``bytearray`` whose first argument is the count, and whose
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second argument is the fill byte to use (defaults to ``\x00``)::
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>>> bytes.fromsize(3)
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b'\x00\x00\x00'
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>>> bytearray.fromsize(3)
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bytearray(b'\x00\x00\x00')
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>>> bytes.fromsize(5, b'\x0a')
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b'\x0a\x0a\x0a\x0a\x0a'
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>>> bytearray.fromsize(5, fill=b'\x0a')
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bytearray(b'\x0a\x0a\x0a\x0a\x0a')
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``fromsize`` will behave just as the current constructors behave when passed a
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single integer, while allowing for non-zero fill values when needed.
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Addition of explicit "single byte" constructors
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-----------------------------------------------
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As binary counterparts to the text ``chr`` function, this PEP proposes
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the addition of an explicit ``fromint`` alternative constructor as a class
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method on both ``bytes`` and ``bytearray``::
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>>> bytes.fromint(65)
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b'A'
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>>> bytearray.fromint(65)
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bytearray(b'A')
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These methods will only accept integers in the range 0 to 255 (inclusive)::
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>>> bytes.fromint(512)
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Traceback (most recent call last):
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File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
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ValueError: integer must be in range(0, 256)
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>>> bytes.fromint(1.0)
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Traceback (most recent call last):
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File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
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TypeError: 'float' object cannot be interpreted as an integer
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The documentation of the ``ord`` builtin will be updated to explicitly note
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that ``bytes.fromint`` is the primary inverse operation for binary data, while
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``chr`` is the inverse operation for text data, and that ``bytearray.fromint``
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also exists.
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Behaviorally, ``bytes.fromint(x)`` will be equivalent to the current
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``bytes([x])`` (and similarly for ``bytearray``). The new spelling is
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expected to be easier to discover and easier to read (especially when used
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in conjunction with indexing operations on binary sequence types).
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As a separate method, the new spelling will also work better with higher
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order functions like ``map``.
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These new methods intentionally do NOT offer the same level of general integer
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support as the existing ``int.to_bytes`` conversion method, which allows
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arbitrarily large integers to be converted to arbitarily long bytes objects. The
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restriction to only accept positive integers that fit in a single byte means
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that no byte order information is needed, and there is no need to handle
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negative numbers. The documentation of the new methods will refer readers to
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``int.to_bytes`` for use cases where handling of arbitrary integers is needed.
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Addition of "getbyte" method to retrieve a single byte
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------------------------------------------------------
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This PEP proposes that ``bytes`` and ``bytearray`` gain the method ``getbyte``
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which will always return ``bytes``::
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>>> b'abc'.getbyte(0)
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b'a'
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If an index is asked for that doesn't exist, ``IndexError`` is raised::
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>>> b'abc'.getbyte(9)
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Traceback (most recent call last):
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File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
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IndexError: index out of range
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Addition of optimised iterator methods that produce ``bytes`` objects
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---------------------------------------------------------------------
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This PEP proposes that ``bytes`` and ``bytearray`` gain an optimised
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``iterbytes`` method that produces length 1 ``bytes`` objects rather than
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integers::
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for x in data.iterbytes():
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# x is a length 1 ``bytes`` object, rather than an integer
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For example::
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>>> tuple(b"ABC".iterbytes())
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(b'A', b'B', b'C')
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Design discussion
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=================
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Why not rely on sequence repetition to create zero-initialised sequences?
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Zero-initialised sequences can be created via sequence repetition::
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>>> b'\x00' * 3
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b'\x00\x00\x00'
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>>> bytearray(b'\x00') * 3
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bytearray(b'\x00\x00\x00')
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However, this was also the case when the ``bytearray`` type was originally
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designed, and the decision was made to add explicit support for it in the
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type constructor. The immutable ``bytes`` type then inherited that feature
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when it was introduced in PEP 3137.
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This PEP isn't revisiting that original design decision, just changing the
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spelling as users sometimes find the current behavior of the binary sequence
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constructors surprising. In particular, there's a reasonable case to be made
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that ``bytes(x)`` (where ``x`` is an integer) should behave like the
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``bytes.fromint(x)`` proposal in this PEP. Providing both behaviors as separate
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class methods avoids that ambiguity.
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Omitting the originally proposed builtin function
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-------------------------------------------------
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When submitted to the Steering Council, this PEP proposed the introduction of
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a ``bchr`` builtin (with the same behaviour as ``bytes.fromint``), recreating
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the ``ord``/``chr``/``unichr`` trio from Python 2 under a different naming
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scheme (``ord``/``bchr``/``chr``).
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The SC indicated they didn't think this functionality was needed often enough
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to justify offering two ways of doing the same thing, especially when one of
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those ways was a new builtin function. That part of the proposal was therefore
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dropped as being redundant with the ``bytes.fromint`` alternate constructor.
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Developers that use this method frequently will instead have the option to
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define their own ``bchr = bytes.fromint`` aliases.
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Scope limitation: memoryview
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----------------------------
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Updating ``memoryview`` with the new item retrieval methods is outside the scope
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of this PEP.
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References
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==========
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.. [1] Initial March 2014 discussion thread on python-ideas
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(https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-ideas/2014-March/027295.html)
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.. [2] Guido's initial feedback in that thread
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(https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-ideas/2014-March/027376.html)
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.. [3] Issue proposing moving zero-initialised sequences to a dedicated API
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(http://bugs.python.org/issue20895)
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.. [4] Issue proposing to use calloc() for zero-initialised binary sequences
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(http://bugs.python.org/issue21644)
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.. [5] August 2014 discussion thread on python-dev
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(https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-ideas/2014-March/027295.html)
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.. [6] June 2016 discussion thread on python-dev
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(https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2016-June/144875.html)
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Copyright
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=========
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This document has been placed in the public domain.
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