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Get rid of the superstitious "~" in dict hashing's "i = (~hash) & mask".
The comment following used to say: /* We use ~hash instead of hash, as degenerate hash functions, such as for ints <sigh>, can have lots of leading zeros. It's not really a performance risk, but better safe than sorry. 12-Dec-00 tim: so ~hash produces lots of leading ones instead -- what's the gain? */ That is, there was never a good reason for doing it. And to the contrary, as explained on Python-Dev last December, it tended to make the *sum* (i + incr) & mask (which is the first table index examined in case of collison) the same "too often" across distinct hashes. Changing to the simpler "i = hash & mask" reduced the number of string-dict collisions (== # number of times we go around the lookup for-loop) from about 6 million to 5 million during a full run of the test suite (these are approximate because the test suite does some random stuff from run to run). The number of collisions in non-string dicts also decreased, but not as dramatically. Note that this may, for a given dict, change the order (wrt previous releases) of entries exposed by .keys(), .values() and .items(). A number of std tests suffered bogus failures as a result. For dicts keyed by small ints, or (less so) by characters, the order is much more likely to be in increasing order of key now; e.g., >>> d = {} >>> for i in range(10): ... d[i] = i ... >>> d {0: 0, 1: 1, 2: 2, 3: 3, 4: 4, 5: 5, 6: 6, 7: 7, 8: 8, 9: 9} >>> Unfortunately. people may latch on to that in small examples and draw a bogus conclusion. test_support.py Moved test_extcall's sortdict() into test_support, made it stronger, and imported sortdict into other std tests that needed it. test_unicode.py Excluced cp875 from the "roundtrip over range(128)" test, because cp875 doesn't have a well-defined inverse for unicode("?", "cp875"). See Python-Dev for excruciating details. Cookie.py Chaged various output functions to sort dicts before building strings from them. test_extcall Fiddled the expected-result file. This remains sensitive to native dict ordering, because, e.g., if there are multiple errors in a keyword-arg dict (and test_extcall sets up many cases like that), the specific error Python complains about first depends on native dict ordering.
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11 changed files with 64 additions and 46 deletions
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@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
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from test_support import verbose
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from test_support import verbose, sortdict
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import warnings
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warnings.filterwarnings("ignore", "the regex module is deprecated",
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DeprecationWarning, __name__)
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@ -40,7 +40,7 @@ print cre.group('one')
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print cre.group(1, 2)
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print cre.group('one', 'two')
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print 'realpat:', cre.realpat
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print 'groupindex:', cre.groupindex
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print 'groupindex:', sortdict(cre.groupindex)
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re = 'world'
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cre = regex.compile(re)
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