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author | Andrew M. Kuchling <amk@amk.ca> | 2001-01-22 04:02:09 (GMT) |
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committer | Andrew M. Kuchling <amk@amk.ca> | 2001-01-22 04:02:09 (GMT) |
commit | 90cecee894f47efb1240c2e7021d0b099ea7944f (patch) | |
tree | f384a3d1fdf5bd82940e04141a018b4f736cce33 /Doc/whatsnew/whatsnew21.tex | |
parent | e8157868583efd09f74e226ce35610775fe12f62 (diff) | |
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Beginning of a "What's New in Python 2.1" article
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diff --git a/Doc/whatsnew/whatsnew21.tex b/Doc/whatsnew/whatsnew21.tex new file mode 100644 index 0000000..aaaf805 --- /dev/null +++ b/Doc/whatsnew/whatsnew21.tex @@ -0,0 +1,253 @@ +\documentclass{howto} + +% $Id$ + +\title{What's New in Python 2.1} +\release{0.01} +\author{A.M. Kuchling} +\authoraddress{\email{amk1@bigfoot.com}} +\begin{document} +\maketitle\tableofcontents + +\section{Introduction} + +It's that time again... time for a new Python release, version 2.1. +One recent goal of the Python development team has been to accelerate +the pace of new releases, with a new release coming every 6 to 9 +months. 2.1 is the first release to come out at this faster pace, with +the first alpha appearing in January, 3 months after the final version +of 2.0 was released. + +This article explains the new features in 2.1. While there aren't as +many changes in 2.1 as there were in Python 2.0, there are still some +pleasant surprises in store. 2.1 is the first release to be steered +through the use of Python Enhancement Proposals, or PEPs, so most of +the sizable changes have accompanying PEPs that provide more complete +documentation and a design rationale for the change. This article +doesn't attempt to document the new features completely, but simply +provides an overview of the new features for Python programmers. +Refer to the Python 2.1 documentation, or to the specific PEP, for +more details about any new feature that particularly interests you. + +Currently 2.1 is available in an alpha release, but the release +schedule calls for a beta release by late February 2001, and a final +release in April 2001. + +% ====================================================================== +\section{PEP 232: Function Attributes} + +In Python 2.1, functions can have arbitrary attributes assigned to +them. We noticed that people were often using docstrings to hold +information about functions and methods, because the \code{__doc__} +attribute was the only way of attaching any information to a function. +For example, in the Zope Web application server, functions are marked +as safe for public access by having a docstring, and in John Aycock's +SPARK parsing framework, docstrings hold parts of the BNF grammar to +be parsed. This overloading is unfortunate, since docstrings are +really intended to hold a function's documentation, and means you +can't properly document functions intended for private use in Zope. + +XXX example here + +% ====================================================================== +\section{PEP 207: Rich Comparisons} + +xxx + +% ====================================================================== +\section{XXX Nested Scopes ?} + +xxx + +% ====================================================================== +\section{PEP 230: Warning Framework} + +Over its 10 years of existence, Python has accumulated a certain +number of obsolete modules and features along the way. It's difficult +to know when a feature is safe to remove, since there's no way of +knowing how much code uses it -- perhaps no programs depend on the +feature, or perhaps many do. To enable removing old features in a +more structured way, a warning framework was added. When the Python +developers want to get rid of a feature, it will first trigger a +warning in the next version of Python. The following Python version +can then drop the feature, and users will have had a full release +cycle to remove uses of the old feature. + +Python 2.1 adds the warning framework to be used in this scheme. It +adds a \module{warnings} module that provide functions to issue +warnings, and to filter out warnings that you don't want to be +displayed. Third-party modules can also use this framework to +deprecate old features that they no longer wish to support. + +For example, in Python 2.1 the \module{regex} module is deprecated, +so importing it causes a warning to be printed: + +\begin{verbatim} +>>> import regex +xxx +\end{verbatim} + +Warnings can be issued by calling the \function{warnings.warn} function: + +\begin{verbatim} +warnings.warn("feature X no longer supported") +\end{verbatim} + +The first parameter is the warning message; an additional optional +parameters can be used to specify a particular warning category. + +Filters can be added to disable certain warnings; a regular expression +pattern can be applied to the message or to the module name in order +to suppress a warning. For example, you may have a program that uses +the \module{regex} module and not want to spare the time to convert it +to use the \module{re} module right now. The warning can be suppressed by calling + +\begin{verbatim} +XXX is this correct? +warnings.filterwarnings(module = 'regex') +\end{verbatim} + +Functions were also added to Python's C API for issuing warnings; +refer to the PEP or to Python's API documentation for the details. + +\seepep{5}{Guidelines for Language Evolution}{Written by Paul Prescod.} + +\seepep{230}{Warning Framework}{Written and implemented by GvR.} + +% ====================================================================== +\section{PEP 229: New Build System} + +When compiling Python, the user had to go in and edit the +\file{Modules/Setup} file in order to enable various additional +modules; the default set is relatively small and limited to modules +that compile on most Unix platforms. This means that on Unix +platforms with many more features, most notably Linux, Python +installations often don't contain all useful modules they could. + +Python 2.0 added the Distutils, a set of modules for distributing and +installing extensions. In Python 2.1, the Distutils are used to +compile much of the standard library of extension modules, +autodetecting which ones are supported on the current machine. +It's hoped that this will make Python installations easier and more featureful. + +\seepep{229}{xxx}{Written and implemented by A.M. Kuchling.} + +% ====================================================================== +\section{PEP 217: Interactive Display Hook} + +When using the Python interpreter interactively, the output of +commands is displayed using the built-in \function{repr()} function. +In Python 2.1, the variable \module{sys.displayhook} can be set to a +callable object which will be called instead of \function{repr()}. +For example, you can set it to a special pretty-printing function: + +\begin{verbatim} +xxx sample transcript +\end{verbatim} + +\seepep{217}{Display Hook for Interactive Use}{Written and implemented by Moshe Zadka.} + +% ====================================================================== +\section{PEP 208: New Coercion Model} + +How numeric coercion is done at the C level was significantly +modified. This will only affect the authors of C extensions to +Python, allowing them more flexibility in writing extension types that +support numeric operations. + +Extension types can now set the type flag +\code{Py_TPFLAGS_NEWSTYLENUMBER} in their \code{PyTypeObject} +structure to indicate that they support the new coercion model. In +such extension types, the numeric slot functions can no longer assume +that they'll be passed two arguments of the same type; instead they +may be passed two arguments of differing types, and can then perform +their own internal coercion. If the slot function is passed a type it +can't handle, it can indicate the failure by returning a reference to +the \code{Py_NotImplemented} singleton value. The numeric functions +of the other type will then be tried, and perhaps they can handle the +operation; if the other type also returns \code{Py_NotImplemented}, +then a \exception{TypeError} will be raised. + +\seepep{208}{Reworking the Coercion Model}{Written and implemented by +Neil Schemenauer, heavily based upon earlier work by Marc-Andr\'e +Lemburg. Read this to understand the fine points of how numeric +operations will now be processed at the C level.} + + +% ====================================================================== +\section{Minor Changes and Fixes} + +There were relatively few smaller changes made in Python 2.1 due to +the shorter release cycle. A search through the CVS change logs turns +up 57 patches applied, and 86 bugs fixed; both figures are likely to +be underestimates. Some of the more notable changes are: + +\begin{itemize} + + +\item The speed of line-oriented file I/O has been improved because +people often complain about its lack of speed, and because it's often +been used as a na\"ive benchmark. The \method{readline()} method of +file objects has therefore been rewritten to be much faster. The +exact amount of the speedup will vary from platform to platform +depending on how slow the C library's \function{getc()} was, but is +around 66\%, and potentially much faster on some particular operating +systems. + +A new module and method for file objects was also added, contributed +by Jeff Epler. The new method, \method{xreadlines()}, is similar to +the existing \function{xrange()} built-in. \function{xreadlines()} +returns an opaque sequence object that only supports being iterated +over, reading a line on every iteration but not reading the entire file into memory as +the existing \method{readline()} method. You'd use it like this: + +\begin{verbatim} +for line in sys.stdin.xreadlines(): + # ... do something for each line ... + ... +\end{verbatim} + +For a fuller discussion of the line I/O changes, see the python-dev summary for January 1-15, 2001. + +\item \module{curses.panel}, a wrapper for the panel library, part of +ncurses and of SYSV curses, was contributed by Thomas Gellekum. The +panel library provides windows with the additional feature of depth. +Windows can be moved higher or lower in the depth ordering, and the +panel library figures out where panels overlap and which sections are +visible. +XXX who contributed this? + +\item Modules can now control which names are imported when \code{from +\var{module} import *} is used, by defining a \code{__all__} attribute +containing a list of names that will be imported. One common +complaint is that if the module imports other modules such as +\module{sys} or \module{string}, \code{from \var{module} import *} +will add them to the importing module's namespace. To fix this, +simply list the public names in \code{__all__}: + +\begin{verbatim} +# List public names +__all__ = ['Database', 'open'] +\end{verbatim} + +\item The \module{ftplib} module now defaults to retrieving files in passive mode, +because passive mode is more likely to work from behind a firewall. +If passive mode is unsuitable for your application or network setup, call +\method{set_pasv(0)} on FTP objects to disable passive mode. + +XXX check bug 126851 for arguments. + +\end{itemize} + +And there's the usual list of bugfixes, minor memory leaks, docstring +edits, and other tweaks, too lengthy to be worth itemizing; see the +CVS logs for the full details if you want them. + + +% ====================================================================== +\section{Acknowledgements} + +The author would like to thank the following people for offering +suggestions on various drafts of this article: no one yet! + +\end{document} |