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author | Brett Cannon <brett@python.org> | 2016-03-18 20:24:15 (GMT) |
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committer | Brett Cannon <brett@python.org> | 2016-03-18 20:24:15 (GMT) |
commit | 81ae89b6114f866870c42e42263bee8ce2ef5395 (patch) | |
tree | b319180103db84eb59c74c6688394f70f6e0a43e /Doc | |
parent | 5936313651119b859420930b4126529cd38d277e (diff) | |
parent | adcb6545194abdbefa47e5377367041634f1577c (diff) | |
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Merge for issue #26095
Diffstat (limited to 'Doc')
-rw-r--r-- | Doc/howto/pyporting.rst | 46 |
1 files changed, 46 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/howto/pyporting.rst b/Doc/howto/pyporting.rst index 87b68d4..621d901 100644 --- a/Doc/howto/pyporting.rst +++ b/Doc/howto/pyporting.rst @@ -282,6 +282,50 @@ To summarize: appropriate #. Be careful when indexing binary data + +Use feature detection instead of version detection +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ +Inevitably you will have code that has to choose what to do based on what +version of Python is running. The best way to do this is with feature detection +of whether the version of Python you're running under supports what you need. +If for some reason that doesn't work then you should make the version check is +against Python 2 and not Python 3. To help explain this, let's look at an +example. + +Let's pretend that you need access to a feature of importlib_ that +is available in Python's standard library since Python 3.3 and available for +Python 2 through importlib2_ on PyPI. You might be tempted to write code to +access e.g. the ``importlib.abc`` module by doing the following:: + + import sys + + if sys.version[0] == 3: + from importlib import abc + else: + from importlib2 import abc + +The problem with this code is what happens when Python 4 comes out? It would +be better to treat Python 2 as the exceptional case instead of Python 3 and +assume that future Python versions will be more compatible with Python 3 than +Python 2:: + + import sys + + if sys.version[0] > 2: + from importlib import abc + else: + from importlib2 import abc + +The best solution, though, is to do no version detection at all and instead rely +on feature detection. That avoids any potential issues of getting the version +detection wrong and helps keep you future-compatible:: + + try: + from importlib import abc + except ImportError: + from importlib2 import abc + + Prevent compatibility regressions --------------------------------- @@ -381,6 +425,8 @@ supported by Python 2. You should also update the classifiers in your .. _cheat sheet: http://python-future.org/compatible_idioms.html .. _coverage.py: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/coverage .. _Futurize: http://python-future.org/automatic_conversion.html +.. _importlib: https://docs.python.org/3/library/importlib.html#module-importlib +.. _importlib2: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/importlib2 .. _Modernize: http://python-modernize.readthedocs.org/en/latest/ .. _Porting to Python 3: http://python3porting.com/ .. _Pylint: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/pylint |