Mass patch by Ka-Ping Yee:

1. Comments at the beginning of the module, before
       functions, and before classes have been turned
       into docstrings.

    2. Tabs are normalized to four spaces.

Also, removed the "remove" function from dircmp.py, which reimplements
list.remove() (it must have been very old).
This commit is contained in:
Guido van Rossum 2000-02-02 15:10:15 +00:00
parent 113e70efa2
commit 4acc25bd39
18 changed files with 2513 additions and 2515 deletions

View file

@ -1,30 +1,30 @@
# class StringIO implements file-like objects that read/write a
# string buffer (a.k.a. "memory files").
#
# This implements (nearly) all stdio methods.
#
# f = StringIO() # ready for writing
# f = StringIO(buf) # ready for reading
# f.close() # explicitly release resources held
# flag = f.isatty() # always false
# pos = f.tell() # get current position
# f.seek(pos) # set current position
# f.seek(pos, mode) # mode 0: absolute; 1: relative; 2: relative to EOF
# buf = f.read() # read until EOF
# buf = f.read(n) # read up to n bytes
# buf = f.readline() # read until end of line ('\n') or EOF
# list = f.readlines()# list of f.readline() results until EOF
# f.write(buf) # write at current position
# f.writelines(list) # for line in list: f.write(line)
# f.getvalue() # return whole file's contents as a string
#
# Notes:
# - Using a real file is often faster (but less convenient).
# - fileno() is left unimplemented so that code which uses it triggers
# an exception early.
# - Seeking far beyond EOF and then writing will insert real null
# bytes that occupy space in the buffer.
# - There's a simple test set (see end of this file).
"""File-like objects that read from or write to a string buffer.
This implements (nearly) all stdio methods.
f = StringIO() # ready for writing
f = StringIO(buf) # ready for reading
f.close() # explicitly release resources held
flag = f.isatty() # always false
pos = f.tell() # get current position
f.seek(pos) # set current position
f.seek(pos, mode) # mode 0: absolute; 1: relative; 2: relative to EOF
buf = f.read() # read until EOF
buf = f.read(n) # read up to n bytes
buf = f.readline() # read until end of line ('\n') or EOF
list = f.readlines()# list of f.readline() results until EOF
f.write(buf) # write at current position
f.writelines(list) # for line in list: f.write(line)
f.getvalue() # return whole file's contents as a string
Notes:
- Using a real file is often faster (but less convenient).
- fileno() is left unimplemented so that code which uses it triggers
an exception early.
- Seeking far beyond EOF and then writing will insert real null
bytes that occupy space in the buffer.
- There's a simple test set (see end of this file).
"""
import string