Merge p3yk branch with the trunk up to revision 45595. This breaks a fair

number of tests, all because of the codecs/_multibytecodecs issue described
here (it's not a Py3K issue, just something Py3K discovers):
http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2006-April/064051.html

Hye-Shik Chang promised to look for a fix, so no need to fix it here. The
tests that are expected to break are:

test_codecencodings_cn
test_codecencodings_hk
test_codecencodings_jp
test_codecencodings_kr
test_codecencodings_tw
test_codecs
test_multibytecodec

This merge fixes an actual test failure (test_weakref) in this branch,
though, so I believe merging is the right thing to do anyway.
This commit is contained in:
Thomas Wouters 2006-04-21 10:40:58 +00:00
parent 9ada3d6e29
commit 49fd7fa443
640 changed files with 52240 additions and 18408 deletions

View file

@ -33,11 +33,8 @@ This document is available from
The \module{re} module was added in Python 1.5, and provides
Perl-style regular expression patterns. Earlier versions of Python
came with the \module{regex} module, which provides Emacs-style
patterns. Emacs-style patterns are slightly less readable and
don't provide as many features, so there's not much reason to use
the \module{regex} module when writing new code, though you might
encounter old code that uses it.
came with the \module{regex} module, which provided Emacs-style
patterns. \module{regex} module was removed in Python 2.5.
Regular expressions (or REs) are essentially a tiny, highly
specialized programming language embedded inside Python and made
@ -1458,7 +1455,7 @@ Jeffrey Friedl's \citetitle{Mastering Regular Expressions}, published
by O'Reilly. Unfortunately, it exclusively concentrates on Perl and
Java's flavours of regular expressions, and doesn't contain any Python
material at all, so it won't be useful as a reference for programming
in Python. (The first edition covered Python's now-obsolete
in Python. (The first edition covered Python's now-removed
\module{regex} module, which won't help you much.) Consider checking
it out from your library.