307 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
307 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
PEP: 200
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Title: Python 2.0 Release Schedule
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Version: $Revision$
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Owner: Jeremy Hylton <jeremy@beopen.com>
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Python-Version: 2.0
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Status: Incomplete
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Introduction
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This PEP describes the Python 2.0 release schedule, tracking the
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status and ownership of the major new features, summarizes
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discussions held in mailing list forums, and provides URLs for
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further information, patches, and other outstanding issues. The
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CVS revision history of this file contains the definitive
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historical record.
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Tentative Release Schedule
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14-Aug-2000: All 2.0 PEPs finished / feature freeze
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28-Aug-2000: 2.0 beta 1
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29-Sep-2000: 2.0 final
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Guidelines for submitting patches and making changes
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Use good sense when committing changes. You should know what we
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mean by good sense or we wouldn't have given you commit privileges
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<0.5 wink>. Some specific examples of good sense include:
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- Do whatever the dictator tells you.
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- Discuss any controversial changes on python-dev first. If you
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get a lot of +1 votes and no -1 votes, make the change. If you
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get a some -1 votes, think twice; consider asking Guido what he
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thinks.
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- If the change is to code you contributed, it probably makes
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sense for you to fix it.
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- If the change affects code someone else wrote, it probably makes
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sense to ask him or her first.
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- You can use the SF Patch Manager to submit a patch and assign it
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to someone for review.
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Any significant new feature must be described in a PEP and
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approved before it is checked in.
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Any significant code addition, such as a new module or large
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patch, must include test cases for the regression test and
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documentation. A patch should not be checked in until the tests
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and documentation are ready.
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If you fix a bug, you should write a test case that would have
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caught the bug.
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If you commit a patch from the SF Patch Manager or fix a bug from
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the Jitterbug database, be sure to reference the patch/bug number
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in the CVS log message. Also be sure to change the status in the
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patch manager or bug database (if you have access to the bug
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database).
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It is not acceptable for any checked in code to cause the
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regression test to fail. If a checkin causes a failure, it must
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be fixed within 24 hours or it will be backed out.
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All contributed C code must be ANSI C. If possible check it with
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two different compilers, e.g. gcc and MSVC.
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All contributed Python code must follow Guido's Python style
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guide. http://www.python.org/doc/essays/styleguide.html
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It is understood that any code contributed will be released under
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an Open Source license. Do not contribute code if it can't be
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released this way.
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Failing test cases need to get fixed
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We need to resolve errors in the regression test suite quickly.
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Changes should not be committed to the CVS tree unless the
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regression test runs cleanly with the changes applied. If it
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fails, there may be bugs lurking in the code. (There may be bugs
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anyway, but that's another matter.) If the test cases are known
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to fail, they serve no useful purpose.
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[what are the "R" and "B" columns supposed to mean? - tim]
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test case platform R B date reported
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--------- -------- - - -------------
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test_fork1 Linux X 26-Jul-2000 just SMP?
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[no clue; there are probably two bugs here]
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[19-Aug-200 tim
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Charles Waldman whipped up a patch to give child processes a new
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"global lock":
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http://sourceforge.net/patch/?func=detailpatch&patch_id=101226&group_id=5470
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While this doesn't appear to address the symptoms we *saw*, it
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*does* so far appear to be fixing the failing cases anyway
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]
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Previously failing test cases
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If you find a test bouncing between this section and the previous one,
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the code it's testing is in trouble!
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test case platform R B date reported
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--------- -------- - - -------------
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test_popen2 Win32 X X 26-Jul-2000
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[20-Aug-2000 tim
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changed the popen2.py _test function to use the "more" cmd
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when os.name == "nt". This makes test_popen2 pass under
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Win98SE.
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HOWEVER, the Win98 "more" invents a leading newline out
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of thin air, and I'm not sure that the other Windows flavors
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of "more" also do that.
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So, somebody please try under other Windows flavors!
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]
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[still fails 15-Aug-2000 for me, on Win98 - tim
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test test_popen2 crashed -- exceptions.AssertionError :
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The problem is that the test uses "cat", but there is
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no such thing under Windows (unless you install it).
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So it's the test that's broken here, not (necessarily)
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the code.
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]
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test_winreg Win32 X X 26-Jul-2000
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[works 15-Aug-2000 for me, on Win98 - tim]
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test_mmap Win32 X X 26-Jul-2000
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[believe that was fixed by Mark H.]
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[works 15-Aug-2000 for me, on Win98 - tim]
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test_longexp Win98+? ? ? 15-Aug-2000
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[fails in release build,
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passes in release build under verbose mode but doesn't
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look like it should pass,
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passes in debug build,
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passes in debug build under verbose mode and looks like
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it should pass
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]
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[18-Aug-2000, tim: can't reproduce, and nobody else
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saw it. I believe there *is* a subtle bug in
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regrtest.py when using -v, and I'll pursue that,
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but can't provoke anything wrong with test_longexp
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anymore; eyeballing Fred's changes didn't turn up
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a suspect either
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19-Aug-2000, tim: the "subtle bug" in regrtest.py -v is
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actually a feature: -v masks *some* kinds of failures,
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since it doesn't compare test output with the canned
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output; this is what makes it say "test passed" even
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in some cases where the test fails without -v
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]
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test_winreg2 Win32 X X 26-Jul-2000
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[20-Aug-2000 tim - the test has been removed from the project]
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[19-Aug-2000 tim
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This test will never work on Win98, because it's looking for
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a part of registry that doesn't exist under W98.
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The module (winreg.py) and this test case will be removed
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before 2.0 for other reasons, though.
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]
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[still fails 15-Aug-2000 for me, on Win98 - tim
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test test_winreg2 failed -- Writing: 'Test Failed: testHives',
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expected: 'HKEY_PERFORMANCE_DATA\012'
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]
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Open items -- should be done/fixed
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Decoding errors when comparing strings. There is a dictionary bug
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that prevents objects from being accessible when an exception is
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raised during hashing or comparison.
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Decide what to do about os.path.commonprefix. Then do it.
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[19-Aug-2000 tim
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Guido msg on Python-Dev:
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- restore the old behavior on all platforms
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- add to the docs that to get the common directory you use dirname()
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- add testcases that check that this works on all platforms
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- don't add commonpathprefix(), because dirname() already does it
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]
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Open items -- completed/fixed
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[20-Aug-2000 tim - done]
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Remove winreg.py and test_winreg2.py. Paul Prescod (the author)
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now wants to make a registry API more like the MS .NET API. Unclear
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whether that can be done in time for 2.0, but, regardless, if we
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let winreg.py out the door we'll be stuck with it forever, and not
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even Paul wants it anymore.
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Accepted and completed
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* Lockstep iteration ("zip" function) - Barry Warsaw
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* SRE - Fredrik Lundh
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[at least I *think* it's done, as of 15-Aug-2000 - tim]
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* Fix xrange printing behavior - Fred Drake
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Remove the tp_print handler for the xrange type; it produced a
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list display instead of 'xrange(...)'. The new code produces a
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minimal call to xrange(), enclosed in (... * N) when N != 1.
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This makes the repr() more human readable while making it do
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what reprs are advertised as doing. It also makes the xrange
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objects obvious when working in the interactive interpreter.
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Accepted and in progress
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* SyntaxError enhancements - Fredrik Lundh
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http://www.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2000-July/012981.html
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* interface to poll system call - Andrew Kuchling
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An OO interface to the poll system call will be added to the
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select module.
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* Compression of Unicode database - Fredrik Lundh
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http://hem.passagen.se/eff/bot.htm#456806
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* PyErr_SafeFormat / snprintf - owner???
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Use snprintf to avoid buffer overflows. Need configure hackery
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to discovery if it is available on the current platform and a
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default implementation if it is not.
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http://www.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2000-April/010051.html
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* Support for opcode arguments > 2**16 - Charles Waldman
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Source files longer than 32K and sequences with more than 32K
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elements both fail because opcode arguments are limited to
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16-bit values.
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* Range literals - Thomas Wouters
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Make range(1, 10, 2) == [1:10:2]
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* List comprehensions - Skip Montanaro (Tim Peters for PEP)
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Need a coherent proposal. Lots of confusing discussion going
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on.
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[note: it's not confusing to Guido <wink> - tim]
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* Augmented assignment - Thomas Wouters
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Add += and family, plus Python and C hooks, and API functions.
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* "import as" - Thomas Wouters
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Extend the 'import' and 'from ... import' mechanism to enable
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importing a symbol as another name. (Without adding a new keyword.)
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* Merge __getitem__ and __getslice__ - Thomas Wouters
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Move __getslice__ functionality into __getitem__, using slice objects,
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for normal slices as well as for extended ones. First step: use
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getitem if there is no getslice.
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* Extended print statement - Barry Warsaw
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PEP 214
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http://python.sourceforge.net/peps/pep-0214.html
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SF Patch #100970
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http://sourceforge.net/patch/?func=detailpatch&patch_id=100970&group_id=5470
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Open: proposed but not accepted or rejected
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* Tim O'Malley's cookie module -- but need different license
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* test harness for C code - Trent Mick
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* Extended slicing on lists - Michael Hudson
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Make lists (and other builtin types) handle extended slices.
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* Integrated gettext module - Barry Warsaw
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wrapper around standard internationalization libraries
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Postponed
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* Eliminated SET_LINENO opcode - Vladimir Marangozov
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Small optimization achieved by using the code object's lnotab
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instead of the SET_LINENO instruction. Uses code rewriting
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technique (that Guido's frowns on) to support debugger, which
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uses SET_LINENO.
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http://starship.python.net/~vlad/lineno/
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for (working at the time) patches
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Discussions on python-dev:
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- http://www.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2000-April/subject.html
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Subject: "Why do we need Traceback Objects?"
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- http://www.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/1999-August/002252.html
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Rejected
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* 'indexing-for' - Thomas Wouters
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Special syntax to give Python code access to the loop-counter in 'for'
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loops. (Without adding a new keyword.)
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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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End:
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