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author | Jeremy Hylton <jeremy@alum.mit.edu> | 2003-05-21 21:45:01 (GMT) |
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committer | Jeremy Hylton <jeremy@alum.mit.edu> | 2003-05-21 21:45:01 (GMT) |
commit | e41195fab62fa7eb695166ad6e84e351bcd8b6d1 (patch) | |
tree | 7b0ec50dfc1765deb7cf935d45b6f5d95de358af /Doc | |
parent | 8bea5dc8794d313ddb9a9e6e68a42efe817a512c (diff) | |
download | cpython-e41195fab62fa7eb695166ad6e84e351bcd8b6d1.zip cpython-e41195fab62fa7eb695166ad6e84e351bcd8b6d1.tar.gz cpython-e41195fab62fa7eb695166ad6e84e351bcd8b6d1.tar.bz2 |
Add documentation for __future__
Diffstat (limited to 'Doc')
-rw-r--r-- | Doc/lib/lib__future__.tex | 69 |
1 files changed, 69 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/lib/lib__future__.tex b/Doc/lib/lib__future__.tex new file mode 100644 index 0000000..bd66368 --- /dev/null +++ b/Doc/lib/lib__future__.tex @@ -0,0 +1,69 @@ +\section{\module{__future__} --- + Future statement definitions} + +\declaremodule[future]{standard}{__future__} +\modulesynopsis{Future statement definitions} + +\module{__future__} is a real module, and serves three purposes: + +\begin{itemize} + +\item To avoid confusing existing tools that analyze import statements + and expect to find the modules they're importing. + +\item To ensure that future_statements run under releases prior to 2.1 + at least yield runtime exceptions (the import of + \module{__future__} will fail, because there was no module of + that name prior to 2.1). + +\item To document when incompatible changes were introduced, and when they + will be --- or were --- made mandatory. This is a form of executable + documentation, and can be inspected programatically via importing + \module{__future__} and examining its contents. + +\end{itemize} + +Each statment in \file{__future__.py} is of the form: + +\begin{verbatim} +FeatureName = "_Feature(" OptionalRelease "," MandatoryRelease "," + CompilerFlag ")" +\end{verbatim} + +where, normally, OptionalRelease is less then MandatoryRelease, and +both are 5-tuples of the same form as \code{sys.version_info}: + +\begin{verbatim} + (PY_MAJOR_VERSION, # the 2 in 2.1.0a3; an int + PY_MINOR_VERSION, # the 1; an int + PY_MICRO_VERSION, # the 0; an int + PY_RELEASE_LEVEL, # "alpha", "beta", "candidate" or "final"; string + PY_RELEASE_SERIAL # the 3; an int + ) +\end{verbatim} + +OptionalRelease records the first release in which the feature was +accepted. + +In the case of MandatoryReleases that have not yet occurred, +MandatoryRelease predicts the release in which the feature will become +part of the language. + +Else MandatoryRelease records when the feature became part of the +language; in releases at or after that, modules no longer need a +future statement to use the feature in question, but may continue to +use such imports. + +MandatoryRelease may also be \code{None}, meaning that a planned +feature got dropped. + +Instances of class \class{_Feature} have two corresponding methods, +\method{getOptionalRelease()} and \method{getMandatoryRelease()}. + +CompilerFlag is the (bitfield) flag that should be passed in the +fourth argument to the builtin function \function{compile()} to enable +the feature in dynamically compiled code. This flag is stored in the +\member{compiler_flag} attribute on \class{_Future} instances. + +No feature description will ever be deleted from \module{__future__}. + |