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author | Brett Cannon <bcannon@gmail.com> | 2011-02-18 01:34:28 (GMT) |
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committer | Brett Cannon <bcannon@gmail.com> | 2011-02-18 01:34:28 (GMT) |
commit | 6277fa4f7d99eda4ec69a58d84d00b22aa3b50b0 (patch) | |
tree | 89b2a563b63f9e9d7aaaa4dc67f3e337c1a8b45d /Doc/howto/pyporting.rst | |
parent | 8f0ae9a17f86f60d84ef3606d033b8ac6831062d (diff) | |
download | cpython-6277fa4f7d99eda4ec69a58d84d00b22aa3b50b0.zip cpython-6277fa4f7d99eda4ec69a58d84d00b22aa3b50b0.tar.gz cpython-6277fa4f7d99eda4ec69a58d84d00b22aa3b50b0.tar.bz2 |
Update the porting HOWTO to be a little less harsh on using 2to3.
Patch reviewed by Raymond Hettinger, permission from Georg Brandl to commit
during an RC.
Diffstat (limited to 'Doc/howto/pyporting.rst')
-rw-r--r-- | Doc/howto/pyporting.rst | 43 |
1 files changed, 20 insertions, 23 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/howto/pyporting.rst b/Doc/howto/pyporting.rst index fb595d0..9b8bc2d 100644 --- a/Doc/howto/pyporting.rst +++ b/Doc/howto/pyporting.rst @@ -31,23 +31,18 @@ If your project is brand-new or does not have a large codebase, then you may want to consider writing/porting :ref:`all of your code for Python 3 and use 3to2 <use_3to2>` to port your code for Python 2. -If your project has a pre-existing Python 2 codebase and you would like Python -3 support to start off a new branch or version of your project, then you will -most likely want to :ref:`port using 2to3 <use_2to3>`. This will allow you to -port your Python 2 code to Python 3 in a semi-automated fashion and begin to -maintain it separately from your Python 2 code. This approach can also work if -your codebase is small and/or simple enough for the translation to occur -quickly. - -Finally, if you want to maintain Python 2 and Python 3 versions of your project -simultaneously and with no differences, then you can write :ref:`Python 2/3 -source-compatible code <use_same_source>`. While the code is not quite as -idiomatic as it would be written just for Python 3 or automating the port from -Python 2, it does makes it easier to continue to do rapid development -regardless of what major version of Python you are developing against at the -time. - -Regardless of which approach you choose, porting is probably not as hard or +If you would prefer to maintain a codebase which is semantically **and** +syntactically compatible with Python 2 & 3 simultaneously, you can write +:ref:`use_same_source`. While this tends to lead to somewhat non-idiomatic +code, it does mean you keep a rapid development process for you, the developer. + +Finally, you do have the option of :ref:`using 2to3 <use_2to3>` to translate +Python 2 code into Python 3 code (with some manual help). This can take the +form of branching your code and using 2to3 to start a Python 3 branch. You can +also have users perform the translation as installation time automatically so +that you only have to maintain a Python 2 codebase. + +Regardless of which approach you choose, porting is not as hard or time-consuming as you might initially think. You can also tackle the problem piece-meal as a good portion of porting is simply updating your code to follow current best practices in a Python 2/3 compatible way. @@ -595,7 +590,8 @@ While it may seem counter-intuitive, you can write Python code which is source-compatible between Python 2 & 3. It does lead to code that is not entirely idiomatic Python (e.g., having to extract the currently raised exception from ``sys.exc_info()[1]``), but it can be run under Python 2 -**and** Python 3 without using 2to3_ as a translation step. This allows you to +**and** Python 3 without using 2to3_ as a translation step (although the tool +should be used to help find potential portability problems). This allows you to continue to have a rapid development process regardless of whether you are developing under Python 2 or Python 3. Whether this approach or using :ref:`use_2to3` works best for you will be a per-project decision. @@ -611,8 +607,8 @@ the same source code. .. _What's New in Python 3.0: http://docs.python.org/release/3.0/whatsnew/3.0.html -Follow The Steps for Using 2to3_ (sans 2to3) --------------------------------------------- +Follow The Steps for Using 2to3_ +-------------------------------- All of the steps outlined in how to :ref:`port Python 2 code with 2to3 <use_2to3>` apply @@ -689,10 +685,11 @@ likely don't need it. Other Resources =============== -The authors of the following blog posts and wiki pages deserve special thanks -for making public their tips for porting Python 2 code to Python 3 (and thus -helping provide information for this document): +The authors of the following blog posts, wiki pages, and books deserve special +thanks for making public their tips for porting Python 2 code to Python 3 (and +thus helping provide information for this document): +* http://python3porting.com/ * http://docs.pythonsprints.com/python3_porting/py-porting.html * http://techspot.zzzeek.org/2011/01/24/zzzeek-s-guide-to-python-3-porting/ * http://dabeaz.blogspot.com/2011/01/porting-py65-and-my-superboard-to.html |