cpython/Lib/difflib.py
Guido van Rossum d8faa3654c Merged revisions 53952-54987 via svnmerge from
svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/trunk

........
  r53954 | jeremy.hylton | 2007-02-26 10:41:18 -0800 (Mon, 26 Feb 2007) | 10 lines

  Do not copy free variables to locals in class namespaces.

  Fixes bug 1569356, but at the cost of a minor incompatibility in
  locals().  Add test that verifies that the class namespace is not
  polluted.  Also clarify the behavior in the library docs.

  Along the way, cleaned up the dict_to_map and map_to_dict
  implementations and added some comments that explain what they do.
........
  r53955 | jeremy.hylton | 2007-02-26 11:00:20 -0800 (Mon, 26 Feb 2007) | 2 lines

  Fix assertion.
........
  r53969 | neal.norwitz | 2007-02-26 14:41:45 -0800 (Mon, 26 Feb 2007) | 3 lines

  When printing an unraisable error, don't print exceptions. before the name.
  This duplicates the behavior whening normally printing exceptions.
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  r53970 | andrew.kuchling | 2007-02-26 15:02:47 -0800 (Mon, 26 Feb 2007) | 1 line

  Markup fix
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  r53975 | neal.norwitz | 2007-02-26 15:48:27 -0800 (Mon, 26 Feb 2007) | 3 lines

  SF #1669182, 2.5 was already fixed.  Just assert in 2.6 since string exceptions
  are gone.
........
  r53976 | andrew.kuchling | 2007-02-26 15:54:17 -0800 (Mon, 26 Feb 2007) | 1 line

  Add some items
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  r53981 | jeremy.hylton | 2007-02-26 17:01:59 -0800 (Mon, 26 Feb 2007) | 4 lines

  Fix long-standing bug in name mangling for package imports

  Reported by Mike Verdone.
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  r53993 | jeremy.hylton | 2007-02-27 08:00:06 -0800 (Tue, 27 Feb 2007) | 2 lines

  tabify
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  r53994 | jeremy.hylton | 2007-02-27 08:13:23 -0800 (Tue, 27 Feb 2007) | 5 lines

  tabify

  Note that ast.c still has a mix of tabs and spaces, because it
  attempts to use four-space indents for more of the new code.
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  r53996 | jeremy.hylton | 2007-02-27 09:24:48 -0800 (Tue, 27 Feb 2007) | 2 lines

  whitespace normalization
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  r53997 | jeremy.hylton | 2007-02-27 10:29:45 -0800 (Tue, 27 Feb 2007) | 24 lines

  Add checking for a number of metaclass error conditions.

  We add some new rules that are required for preserving internal
  invariants of types.

  1.  If type (or a subclass of type) appears in bases, it must appear
      before any non-type bases.  If a non-type base (like a regular
      new-style class) occurred first, it could trick type into
      allocating the new class an __dict__ which must be impossible.

  2. There are several checks that are made of bases when creating a
     type.  Those checks are now repeated when assigning to __bases__.
     We also add the restriction that assignment to __bases__ may not
     change the metaclass of the type.

  Add new tests for these cases and for a few other oddball errors that
  were no previously tested.  Remove a crasher test that was fixed.

  Also some internal refactoring:  Extract the code to find the most
  derived metaclass of a type and its bases.  It is now needed in two
  places.  Rewrite the TypeError checks in test_descr to use doctest.
  The tests now clearly show what exception they expect to see.
........
  r53998 | jeremy.hylton | 2007-02-27 10:33:31 -0800 (Tue, 27 Feb 2007) | 2 lines

  Add news about changes to metaclasses and __bases__ error checking.
........
  r54016 | armin.rigo | 2007-02-28 01:25:29 -0800 (Wed, 28 Feb 2007) | 3 lines

  Modify the segfaulting example to show why r53997 is not a solution to
  it.
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  r54022 | brett.cannon | 2007-02-28 10:15:00 -0800 (Wed, 28 Feb 2007) | 2 lines

  Add a test for instantiating SyntaxError with no arguments.
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  r54026 | raymond.hettinger | 2007-02-28 10:27:41 -0800 (Wed, 28 Feb 2007) | 1 line

  Docstring nit.
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  r54033 | raymond.hettinger | 2007-02-28 10:37:52 -0800 (Wed, 28 Feb 2007) | 1 line

  Prepare collections module for pure python code entries.
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  r54053 | raymond.hettinger | 2007-02-28 22:16:43 -0800 (Wed, 28 Feb 2007) | 1 line

  Add collections.NamedTuple
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  r54054 | neal.norwitz | 2007-02-28 23:04:41 -0800 (Wed, 28 Feb 2007) | 1 line

  Add Pat and Eric for work on PEP 3101 in the sandbox
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  r54061 | andrew.kuchling | 2007-03-01 06:36:12 -0800 (Thu, 01 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Add NamedTuple
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  r54080 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-02 06:37:12 -0800 (Fri, 02 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Bug #1628895: some better tries to find HTML documentation in pydoc.
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  r54086 | raymond.hettinger | 2007-03-02 11:20:46 -0800 (Fri, 02 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Fix embarrassing typo and fix constantification of None
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  r54088 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-02 12:30:14 -0800 (Fri, 02 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Bugs #1668032, #1668036, #1669304: clarify behavior of PyMem_Realloc and _Resize.
........
  r54114 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-04 09:18:54 -0800 (Sun, 04 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Fix a bug in test_dict and test_userdict, found at the PyPy sprint.
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  r54124 | skip.montanaro | 2007-03-04 12:52:28 -0800 (Sun, 04 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Teach setup.py how to find Berkeley DB on Macs using MacPorts.
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  r54125 | skip.montanaro | 2007-03-04 12:54:12 -0800 (Sun, 04 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  note MacPorts/BerkDB change in setup.py
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  r54136 | neal.norwitz | 2007-03-04 23:52:01 -0800 (Sun, 04 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Added Pete for 3101 too
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  r54138 | facundo.batista | 2007-03-05 08:31:54 -0800 (Mon, 05 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Minor corrections to docs, and an explanation comentary
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  r54139 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-05 14:28:08 -0800 (Mon, 05 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Patch #1674228: when assigning a slice (old-style), check for the
  sq_ass_slice instead of the sq_slice slot.
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  r54149 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-06 01:33:01 -0800 (Tue, 06 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Nit: a struct field is set to GenericAlloc, not GenericAlloc().
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  r54150 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-06 02:02:47 -0800 (Tue, 06 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Patch #1671450: add a section about subclassing builtin types to the
  "extending and embedding" tutorial.
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  r54152 | martin.v.loewis | 2007-03-06 02:41:24 -0800 (Tue, 06 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Patch #1121142: Implement ZipFile.open.
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  r54154 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-06 03:51:14 -0800 (Tue, 06 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  A test case for the fix in #1674228.
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  r54156 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-06 03:52:24 -0800 (Tue, 06 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Patch #1672481: fix bug in idlelib.MultiCall.
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  r54159 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-06 04:17:50 -0800 (Tue, 06 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Bug #1674503: close the file opened by execfile() in an error condition.
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  r54160 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-06 05:32:52 -0800 (Tue, 06 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Fix another reincarnation of bug #1576657 in defaultdict.
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  r54162 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-06 05:35:00 -0800 (Tue, 06 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  A test case for the defaultdict KeyError bug.
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  r54164 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-06 05:37:45 -0800 (Tue, 06 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Patch #1663234: you can now run doctest on test files and modules
  using "python -m doctest [-v] filename ...".
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  r54165 | martin.v.loewis | 2007-03-06 06:43:00 -0800 (Tue, 06 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Patch #912410: Replace HTML entity references for attribute values
  in HTMLParser.
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  r54166 | skip.montanaro | 2007-03-06 07:41:38 -0800 (Tue, 06 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  patch 1673619 - identify extension modules which cannot be built
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  r54167 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-03-06 07:50:01 -0800 (Tue, 06 Mar 2007) | 5 lines

  Patch #1646728: datetime.fromtimestamp fails with negative
  fractional times.  With unittest.

  Somebody please backport to 2.5.
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  r54169 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-06 09:49:14 -0800 (Tue, 06 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Fix cmp vs. key argument for list.sort.
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  r54170 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-06 10:21:32 -0800 (Tue, 06 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Small nit, found by Neal.
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  r54171 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-06 10:29:58 -0800 (Tue, 06 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Patch #1602128: clarify that richcmp methods can return NotImplemented
  and should return True or False otherwise.
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  r54173 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-06 10:41:12 -0800 (Tue, 06 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Patch #1638879: don't accept strings with embedded NUL bytes in long().
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  r54175 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-06 10:47:31 -0800 (Tue, 06 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Patch #1673121: update README wrt. OSX default shell.
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  r54177 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-06 10:59:11 -0800 (Tue, 06 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Patch #1654417: make operator.{get,set,del}slice use the full range
  of Py_ssize_t.
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  r54180 | walter.doerwald | 2007-03-06 12:38:57 -0800 (Tue, 06 Mar 2007) | 4 lines

  Patch for bug #1633621: if curses.resizeterm() or
  curses.resize_term() is called, update _curses.LINES,
  _curses.COLS, curses.LINES and curses.COLS.
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  r54182 | walter.doerwald | 2007-03-06 13:15:24 -0800 (Tue, 06 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Document change to curses.
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  r54188 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-06 16:34:46 -0800 (Tue, 06 Mar 2007) | 5 lines

  Variant of patch #697613: don't exit the interpreter on a SystemExit
  exception if the -i command line option or PYTHONINSPECT environment
  variable is given, but break into the interactive interpreter just like
  on other exceptions or normal program exit.
   (backport)
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  r54189 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-06 16:40:28 -0800 (Tue, 06 Mar 2007) | 4 lines

  Patch #703779: unset __file__ in __main__ after running a file. This
  makes the filenames the warning module prints much more sensible when
  a PYTHONSTARTUP file is used.
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  r54192 | george.yoshida | 2007-03-06 20:21:18 -0800 (Tue, 06 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  add versionadded info
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  r54195 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-06 23:39:06 -0800 (Tue, 06 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Patch #812285: allow multiple auth schemes in AbstractBasicAuthHandler.
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  r54197 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-07 00:31:51 -0800 (Wed, 07 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Patch #1001604: glob.glob() now returns unicode filenames if it was
  given a unicode argument and os.listdir() returns unicode filenames.
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  r54199 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-07 01:09:40 -0800 (Wed, 07 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Patches #1550273, #1550272: fix a few bugs in unittest and add a
  comprehensive test suite for the module.
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  r54201 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-07 01:21:06 -0800 (Wed, 07 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Patch #787789: allow to pass custom TestRunner instances to unittest's
  main() function.
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  r54202 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-07 01:34:45 -0800 (Wed, 07 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Patch #1669331: clarify shutil.copyfileobj() behavior wrt. file position.
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  r54204 | martin.v.loewis | 2007-03-07 03:04:33 -0800 (Wed, 07 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Bug #1115886: os.path.splitext('.cshrc') gives now ('.cshrc', '').
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  r54206 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-07 03:37:42 -0800 (Wed, 07 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Patch #1675471: convert test_pty to unittest.
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  r54207 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-07 03:54:49 -0800 (Wed, 07 Mar 2007) | 4 lines

  Add some sanity checks to unittest.TestSuite's addTest(s) methods.
  Fixes #878275.
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  r54209 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-03-07 07:16:29 -0800 (Wed, 07 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Windows doesn't support negative timestamps.  Skip the tests involving them
  if os.name == "nt".
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  r54219 | martin.v.loewis | 2007-03-08 05:42:43 -0800 (Thu, 08 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Add missing ) in parenthical remark.
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  r54220 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-08 09:49:06 -0800 (Thu, 08 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Fix #1676656: \em is different from \emph...
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  r54222 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-08 10:37:31 -0800 (Thu, 08 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Add a NEWS entry for rev. 54207,8.
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  r54225 | raymond.hettinger | 2007-03-08 11:24:27 -0800 (Thu, 08 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  SF 1676321:  empty() returned wrong result
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  r54227 | collin.winter | 2007-03-08 11:58:14 -0800 (Thu, 08 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Backported r54226 from p3yk: Move test_unittest, test_doctest and test_doctest2 higher up in the testing order.
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  r54230 | raymond.hettinger | 2007-03-08 13:33:47 -0800 (Thu, 08 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  SF #1637850:  make_table in difflib did not work with unicode
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  r54232 | collin.winter | 2007-03-08 14:16:25 -0800 (Thu, 08 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Patch #1668482: don't use '-' in mkstemp
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  r54233 | brett.cannon | 2007-03-08 15:58:11 -0800 (Thu, 08 Mar 2007) | 10 lines

  Introduce test.test_support.TransientResource.  It's a context manager to
  surround calls to resources that may or may not be available.  Specifying the
  expected exception and attributes to be raised if the resource is not available
  prevents overly broad catching of exceptions.

  This is meant to help suppress spurious failures by raising
  test.test_support.ResourceDenied if the exception matches.  It would probably
  be good to go through the various network tests and surround the calls to catch
  connection timeouts (as done with test_socket_ssl in this commit).
........
  r54234 | collin.winter | 2007-03-08 19:15:56 -0800 (Thu, 08 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Patch #1481079: Support of HTTP_REFERER in CGIHTTPServer.py
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  r54235 | collin.winter | 2007-03-08 19:26:32 -0800 (Thu, 08 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Add NEWS item for patch #1481079 (r54234).
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  r54237 | neal.norwitz | 2007-03-08 21:59:01 -0800 (Thu, 08 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Fix SF #1676971, Complex OverflowError has a typo
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  r54239 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-09 04:58:41 -0800 (Fri, 09 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Typo.
........
  r54240 | martin.v.loewis | 2007-03-09 07:35:55 -0800 (Fri, 09 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Patch #957003: Implement smtplib.LMTP.
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  r54243 | collin.winter | 2007-03-09 10:09:10 -0800 (Fri, 09 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Bug #1629566: clarify the docs on the return values of parsedate() and parsedate_tz() in email.utils and rfc822.
........
  r54244 | thomas.heller | 2007-03-09 11:21:28 -0800 (Fri, 09 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Fix bug #1646630: ctypes.string_at(buf, 0) and ctypes.wstring_at(buf, 0)
  returned string up to the first NUL character.
........
  r54245 | martin.v.loewis | 2007-03-09 11:36:01 -0800 (Fri, 09 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Add Ziga Seilnacht.
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  r54247 | collin.winter | 2007-03-09 12:33:07 -0800 (Fri, 09 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Patch #1491866: change the complex() constructor to allow parthensized forms. This means complex(repr(x)) now works instead of raising a ValueError.
........
  r54248 | thomas.heller | 2007-03-09 12:39:22 -0800 (Fri, 09 Mar 2007) | 7 lines

  Bug #1651235: When a tuple was passed to a ctypes function call,
  Python would crash instead of raising an error.

  The crash was caused by a section of code that should have been
  removed long ago, at that time ctypes had other ways to pass
  parameters to function calls.
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  r54250 | collin.winter | 2007-03-09 15:30:39 -0800 (Fri, 09 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Hashing simplification pointed out by Thomas Wouters.
........
  r54252 | collin.winter | 2007-03-09 18:23:40 -0800 (Fri, 09 Mar 2007) | 5 lines

  * Unlink test files before and after each test; hopefully this will cut down on recent buildbot failures in test_islink.
  * Drop safe_remove() in favor of test_support.unlink().
  * Fix the indentation of test_samefile so that it runs.
........
  r54253 | collin.winter | 2007-03-09 18:51:26 -0800 (Fri, 09 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Bug #1531963: Make SocketServer.TCPServer's server_address always be equal to calling getsockname() on the server's socket.
  Will backport.
........
  r54254 | neal.norwitz | 2007-03-09 19:19:18 -0800 (Fri, 09 Mar 2007) | 4 lines

  Simplify a little by handling the TCP case first.
  Update to use predominant style of spaces around = in args list
  and print to stderr if debugging.
........
  r54256 | collin.winter | 2007-03-09 19:35:34 -0800 (Fri, 09 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Add proper attribution for a bug fix.
........
  r54257 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-09 23:38:14 -0800 (Fri, 09 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Typos.
........
  r54260 | collin.winter | 2007-03-10 06:33:32 -0800 (Sat, 10 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Convert an assert to a raise so it works even in the presence of -O.
........
  r54262 | collin.winter | 2007-03-10 06:41:48 -0800 (Sat, 10 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Patch #1599845: Add an option to disable the implicit calls to server_bind() and server_activate() in the constructors for TCPServer, SimpleXMLRPCServer and DocXMLRPCServer.
........
  r54268 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-11 00:28:46 -0800 (Sun, 11 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Add missing "return" statements in exception handler.
........
  r54270 | ziga.seilnacht | 2007-03-11 08:54:54 -0700 (Sun, 11 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Patch #1675981: remove unreachable code from type.__new__() method.
  __dict__ and __weakref__ are removed from the slots tuple earlier
  in the code, in the loop that mangles slot names. Will backport.
........
  r54271 | collin.winter | 2007-03-11 09:00:20 -0700 (Sun, 11 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Patch #1192590: Fix pdb's "ignore" and "condition" commands so they trap the IndexError caused by passing in an invalid breakpoint number.
  Will backport.
........
  r54274 | vinay.sajip | 2007-03-11 11:32:07 -0700 (Sun, 11 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Fix resource leak reported in SF #1516995.
........
  r54278 | collin.winter | 2007-03-11 18:55:54 -0700 (Sun, 11 Mar 2007) | 4 lines

  Patch #1678662: ftp.python.org does not exist. So the testcode in urllib.py must use a more
  stable FTP.
  Will backport.
........
  r54280 | barry.warsaw | 2007-03-11 20:20:01 -0700 (Sun, 11 Mar 2007) | 8 lines

  Tokio Kikuchi's fix for SF bug #1629369; folding whitespace allowed in the
  display name of an email address, e.g.

  Foo
  \tBar <foo@example.com>

  Test case added by Barry.
........
  r54282 | skip.montanaro | 2007-03-11 20:30:50 -0700 (Sun, 11 Mar 2007) | 4 lines

  Sane humans would call these invalid tests, but Andrew McNamara pointed out
  that given the inputs in these tests Excel does indeed produce the output
  these tests expect.  Document that for future confused folks.
........
  r54283 | martin.v.loewis | 2007-03-12 03:50:39 -0700 (Mon, 12 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Bug #1675511: Use -Kpic instead of -xcode=pic32 on Solaris/x86.
........
  r54285 | martin.v.loewis | 2007-03-12 04:01:10 -0700 (Mon, 12 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Patch #1677862: Require a space or tab after import in .pth files.
........
  r54287 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-12 06:17:36 -0700 (Mon, 12 Mar 2007) | 8 lines

  Backport from Py3k branch:

  Patch #1591665: implement the __dir__() special function lookup in PyObject_Dir.

  Had to change a few bits of the patch because classobjs and __methods__ are still
  in Py2.6.
........
  r54288 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-12 07:30:05 -0700 (Mon, 12 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Bug #1678647: write a newline after printing an exception in any
  case, even when converting the value to a string failed.
........
  r54290 | collin.winter | 2007-03-12 08:57:19 -0700 (Mon, 12 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Patch #1678088: convert test_operations to use unittest, fold the result into test_dict.
........
  r54291 | collin.winter | 2007-03-12 09:11:39 -0700 (Mon, 12 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Bug #742342: make Python stop segfaulting on infinitely-recursive reload()s. Fixed by patch #922167.
  Will backport.
........
  r54292 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-12 09:15:09 -0700 (Mon, 12 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Typo fix.
........
  r54295 | collin.winter | 2007-03-12 10:24:07 -0700 (Mon, 12 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Patch #1670993: Refactor test_threadedtempfile.py to use unittest.
........
  r54296 | tim.peters | 2007-03-12 11:07:52 -0700 (Mon, 12 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Whitespace normalization.
........
  r54297 | tim.peters | 2007-03-12 11:09:22 -0700 (Mon, 12 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Set missing svn:eol-style property on text files.
........
  r54315 | brett.cannon | 2007-03-12 19:34:09 -0700 (Mon, 12 Mar 2007) | 8 lines

  Add test.test_support.transient_internet .  Returns a context manager that
  nests test.test_support.TransientResource context managers that capture
  exceptions raised when the Internet connection is flaky.

  Initially using in test_socket_ssl but should probably be expanded to cover any
  test that should not raise the captured exceptions if the Internet connection
  works.
........
  r54316 | brett.cannon | 2007-03-12 20:05:40 -0700 (Mon, 12 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Fix a typo where the variable name was not updated.
........
  r54318 | neal.norwitz | 2007-03-12 21:59:58 -0700 (Mon, 12 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Add Jerry Seutter for a bunch of his recent patches refactoring tests
........
  r54319 | neal.norwitz | 2007-03-12 22:07:14 -0700 (Mon, 12 Mar 2007) | 7 lines

  Add some other acks for recent checkins:

  Brian Leair  - 922167
  Tomer Filiba - 1591665
  Jeremy Jones - 1192590
........
  r54321 | neal.norwitz | 2007-03-12 22:31:38 -0700 (Mon, 12 Mar 2007) | 9 lines

  Fix some style nits:
    * lines too long
    * wrong indentation
    * space after a function name
    * wrong function name in error string
    * simplifying some logic

  Also add an error check to PyDict_SetItemString.
........
  r54322 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-13 00:23:16 -0700 (Tue, 13 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Typo and grammar fixes.
........
  r54323 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-13 00:50:57 -0700 (Tue, 13 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Patch #1679379: add documentation for fnmatch.translate().
........
  r54325 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-13 00:57:51 -0700 (Tue, 13 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Patch #1642844: comments to clarify the complexobject constructor.
........
  r54326 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-13 01:14:27 -0700 (Tue, 13 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Patch #1668100: urllib2 now correctly raises URLError instead of
  OSError if accessing a local file via the file:// protocol fails.
........
  r54327 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-13 02:32:11 -0700 (Tue, 13 Mar 2007) | 4 lines

  Patch #1635454: the csv.DictWriter class now includes the offending
  field names in its exception message if you try to write a record with
  a dictionary containing fields not in the CSV field names list.
........
  r54328 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-13 02:41:31 -0700 (Tue, 13 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Patch #1555098: use str.join() instead of repeated string
  concatenation in robotparser.
........
  r54329 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-13 03:06:48 -0700 (Tue, 13 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Patch #1542681: add entries for "with", "as" and "CONTEXTMANAGERS" to
  pydoc's help keywords.
........
  r54331 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-13 03:19:22 -0700 (Tue, 13 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Patch #1569798: fix a bug in distutils when building Python from a
  directory within sys.exec_prefix.
........
  r54333 | martin.v.loewis | 2007-03-13 03:24:00 -0700 (Tue, 13 Mar 2007) | 4 lines

  Patch #1449244: Support Unicode strings in
  email.message.Message.{set_charset,get_content_charset}.
  Will backport.
........
  r54335 | lars.gustaebel | 2007-03-13 03:47:19 -0700 (Tue, 13 Mar 2007) | 34 lines

  This is the implementation of POSIX.1-2001 (pax) format read/write
  support.

  The TarInfo class now contains all necessary logic to process and
  create tar header data which has been moved there from the TarFile
  class. The fromtarfile() method was added. The new path and linkpath
  properties are aliases for the name and linkname attributes in
  correspondence to the pax naming scheme.

  The TarFile constructor and classmethods now accept a number of
  keyword arguments which could only be set as attributes before (e.g.
  dereference, ignore_zeros). The encoding and pax_headers arguments
  were added for pax support. There is a new tarinfo keyword argument
  that allows using subclassed TarInfo objects in TarFile.

  The boolean TarFile.posix attribute is deprecated, because now three
  tar formats are supported. Instead, the desired format for writing is
  specified using the constants USTAR_FORMAT, GNU_FORMAT and PAX_FORMAT
  as the format keyword argument. This change affects TarInfo.tobuf()
  as well.

  The test suite has been heavily reorganized and partially rewritten.
  A new testtar.tar was added that contains sample data in many formats
  from 4 different tar programs.

  Some bugs and quirks that also have been fixed:
  Directory names do no longer have a trailing slash in TarInfo.name or
  TarFile.getnames().
  Adding the same file twice does not create a hardlink file member.
  The TarFile constructor does no longer need a name argument.
  The TarFile._mode attribute was renamed to mode and contains either
  'r', 'w' or 'a'.
........
  r54336 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-13 05:34:25 -0700 (Tue, 13 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Bug #1622896: fix a rare corner case where the bz2 module raised an
  error in spite of a succesful compression.
........
  r54338 | lars.gustaebel | 2007-03-13 08:47:07 -0700 (Tue, 13 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Quick fix for tests that fail on systems with an encoding other
  than 'iso8859-1'.
........
  r54339 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-13 10:43:32 -0700 (Tue, 13 Mar 2007) | 4 lines

  Patch #1603688: ConfigParser.SafeConfigParser now checks values that
  are set for invalid interpolation sequences that would lead to errors
  on reading back those values.
........
  r54341 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-13 11:15:41 -0700 (Tue, 13 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Patch #1581073: add a flag to textwrap that prevents the dropping of
  whitespace while wrapping.
........
  r54343 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-13 11:24:40 -0700 (Tue, 13 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Patch #1605192: list allowed states in error messages for imaplib.
........
  r54344 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-13 11:31:49 -0700 (Tue, 13 Mar 2007) | 4 lines

  Patch #1537850: tempfile.NamedTemporaryFile now has a "delete" parameter
  which can be set to False to prevent the default delete-on-close
  behavior.
........
  r54345 | collin.winter | 2007-03-13 11:53:04 -0700 (Tue, 13 Mar 2007) | 9 lines

  Add acks for recent patch checkins:

  Arvin Schnell - 1668482
  S?\195?\169bastien Martini - 1481079
  Heiko Wundram - 1491866
  Damon Kohler - 1545011
  Peter Parente - 1599845
  Bjorn Lindqvist - 1678662
........
  r54346 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-13 12:00:36 -0700 (Tue, 13 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Acks for recent patches.
........
  r54347 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-13 12:18:18 -0700 (Tue, 13 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Fix a tab.
........
  r54348 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-13 12:32:21 -0700 (Tue, 13 Mar 2007) | 4 lines

  Patch #1533909: the timeit module now accepts callables in addition to
  strings for the code to time and the setup code. Also added two
  convenience functions for instantiating a Timer and calling its methods.
........
  r54352 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-13 13:02:57 -0700 (Tue, 13 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Patch #1530482: add pydoc.render_doc() which returns the documentation
  for a thing instead of paging it to stdout, which pydoc.doc() does.
........
  r54357 | thomas.heller | 2007-03-13 13:42:52 -0700 (Tue, 13 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Patch #1649190: Adding support for _Bool to ctypes as c_bool, by David Remahl.
........
  r54358 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-13 13:46:32 -0700 (Tue, 13 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Patch #1444529: the builtin compile() now accepts keyword arguments.
   (backport)
........
  r54359 | thomas.heller | 2007-03-13 14:01:39 -0700 (Tue, 13 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Add versionadded marker for ctypes.c_bool.
........
  r54360 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-13 14:08:15 -0700 (Tue, 13 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Patch #1393667: pdb now has a "run" command which restarts the debugged
  Python program, optionally with different arguments.
........
  r54361 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-13 14:32:01 -0700 (Tue, 13 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Deprecate commands.getstatus().
........
  r54362 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-13 14:32:56 -0700 (Tue, 13 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  NEWS entry for getstatus() deprecation.
........
  r54363 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-13 14:58:44 -0700 (Tue, 13 Mar 2007) | 4 lines

  Patch #1429539: pdb now correctly initializes the __main__ module for
  the debugged script, which means that imports from __main__ work
  correctly now.
........
  r54364 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-13 15:07:36 -0700 (Tue, 13 Mar 2007) | 4 lines

  Patch #957650: "%var%" environment variable references are now properly
  expanded in ntpath.expandvars(), also "~user" home directory references
  are recognized and handled on Windows.
........
  r54365 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-13 15:16:30 -0700 (Tue, 13 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Patch #1194449: correctly detect unbound methods in pydoc.
........
  r54367 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-13 15:49:43 -0700 (Tue, 13 Mar 2007) | 5 lines

  Patch #1185447: binascii.b2a_qp() now correctly quotes binary characters
  with ASCII value less than 32. Also, it correctly quotes dots only if
  they occur on a single line, as opposed to the previous behavior of
  quoting dots if they are the second character of any line.
........
  r54368 | collin.winter | 2007-03-13 16:02:15 -0700 (Tue, 13 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Inline PyImport_GetModulesReloading().
........
  r54371 | barry.warsaw | 2007-03-13 21:59:50 -0700 (Tue, 13 Mar 2007) | 6 lines

  SF bug #1582282; decode_header() incorrectly splits not-conformant RFC
  2047-like headers where there is no whitespace between encoded words.  This
  fix changes the matching regexp to include a trailing lookahead assertion that
  the closing ?= must be followed by whitespace, newline, or end-of-string.
  This also changes the regexp to add the MULTILINE flag.
........
  r54372 | gregory.p.smith | 2007-03-14 00:17:40 -0700 (Wed, 14 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  correct order and names of the less often used keyword parameters.
........
  r54373 | gregory.p.smith | 2007-03-14 00:19:50 -0700 (Wed, 14 Mar 2007) | 5 lines

  Its time to stop listing (Unix, Windows) when we really mean "everything but Mac OS 9"
  now that nobody is likely to use Python on Mac OS 9 and most of the (Mac) platform
  items are all OS X special API specific since OS X is unixy enough for these modules
  to be available out of the box.
........
  r54376 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-14 01:27:52 -0700 (Wed, 14 Mar 2007) | 4 lines

  Bug #767111: fix long-standing bug in urllib which caused an
  AttributeError instead of an IOError when the server's response didn't
  contain a valid HTTP status line.
........
  r54378 | ziga.seilnacht | 2007-03-14 05:24:09 -0700 (Wed, 14 Mar 2007) | 4 lines

  Patch #1680015: Don't modify __slots__ tuple if it contains an unicode
  name. Remove a reference leak that happened if the name could not be
  converted to string. Will backport.
........
  r54386 | martin.v.loewis | 2007-03-14 13:02:31 -0700 (Wed, 14 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Patch #1559413: Fix test_cmd_line if sys.executable contains a space.
  Will backport.
........
  r54389 | brett.cannon | 2007-03-14 14:40:13 -0700 (Wed, 14 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Note how test_socket_ssl has various exceptions that deal with a flaky Net
  connection are silenced.
........
  r54390 | brett.cannon | 2007-03-14 14:44:15 -0700 (Wed, 14 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Raise ResourceDenied in test_urllib2net when the Net connection goes bad.
........
  r54391 | neal.norwitz | 2007-03-14 21:41:20 -0700 (Wed, 14 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Wrap a long line and fix a typo (is -> if)
........
  r54392 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-15 00:38:14 -0700 (Thu, 15 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Patch #1680978: consistently use "alive" instead of "active" in the
  thread lib doc.
........
  r54394 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-15 00:41:30 -0700 (Thu, 15 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Patch #1681153: the wave module now closes a file object it opened if
  initialization failed.
........
  r54397 | ziga.seilnacht | 2007-03-15 04:44:55 -0700 (Thu, 15 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Patch #1462488: prevent a segfault in object_reduce_ex() by splitting
  the implementation for __reduce__ and __reduce_ex__ into two separate
  functions. Fixes bug #931877. Will backport.
........
  r54404 | collin.winter | 2007-03-15 21:11:30 -0700 (Thu, 15 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Patch #1642547: Fix an error/crash when encountering syntax errors in complex if statements.
  Will backport.
........
  r54406 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-16 00:55:09 -0700 (Fri, 16 Mar 2007) | 5 lines

  Bug #1681228: the webbrowser module now correctly uses the default
  GNOME or KDE browser, depending on whether there is a session of one
  of those present. Also, it tries the Windows default browser before
  trying Mozilla variants.
   (backport)
........
  r54407 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-16 01:22:40 -0700 (Fri, 16 Mar 2007) | 4 lines

  Patch #1273829: os.walk() now has a "followlinks" parameter. If set to
  True (which is not the default), it visits symlinks pointing to
  directories.
........
  r54408 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-16 01:24:21 -0700 (Fri, 16 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Add \versionadded tag.
........
  r54409 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-16 01:33:47 -0700 (Fri, 16 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  RFE #1670167: fix in isinstance() docs.
........
  r54412 | ziga.seilnacht | 2007-03-16 04:59:38 -0700 (Fri, 16 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Patch #1623563: allow __class__ assignment for classes with __slots__.
  The old and the new class are still required to have the same slot
  names, but the order in which they are specified is not relevant.
........
  r54413 | ziga.seilnacht | 2007-03-16 05:11:11 -0700 (Fri, 16 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Whitespace cleanup. Also remove the empty lines
  from the previous check in.
........
  r54414 | jeremy.hylton | 2007-03-16 07:49:11 -0700 (Fri, 16 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Remove warning: funcion declaration isn't a prototype
........
  r54415 | jeremy.hylton | 2007-03-16 08:59:47 -0700 (Fri, 16 Mar 2007) | 11 lines

  Clean up formatting of this file.

  The file should now follow PEP 7, except that it uses 4 space indents
  (in the style of Py3k).  This particular code would be really hard to
  read with the regular tab idents.

  Other changes:
   - reflow long lines
   - change multi-line conditionals to have test at end of line
........
  r54417 | collin.winter | 2007-03-16 14:13:35 -0700 (Fri, 16 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Patch #1676994: Refactor test_popen2 to use unittest.
........
  r54418 | collin.winter | 2007-03-16 14:15:35 -0700 (Fri, 16 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Remove test/output/test_popen2 (missed in r54417).
........
  r54419 | collin.winter | 2007-03-16 15:16:08 -0700 (Fri, 16 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Patch 1339796: add a relpath() function to os.path.
........
  r54421 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-17 09:08:45 -0700 (Sat, 17 Mar 2007) | 5 lines

  Patch #1675423: PyComplex_AsCComplex() now tries to convert an object
  to complex using its __complex__() method before falling back to the
  __float__() method. Therefore, the functions in the cmath module now
  can operate on objects that define a __complex__() method.
   (backport)
........
  r54423 | gregory.p.smith | 2007-03-17 15:33:35 -0700 (Sat, 17 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  move note to the correct section
........
  r54426 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-18 01:25:00 -0700 (Sun, 18 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Patch #1682878: the new socket methods are recv_into and recvfrom_into, not *_buf.
........
  r54432 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-18 11:28:25 -0700 (Sun, 18 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Patch #1678339: test case for bug in difflib.
........
  r54439 | collin.winter | 2007-03-19 11:52:08 -0700 (Mon, 19 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Patch #1630118: add a SpooledTemporaryFile class to tempfile.
........
  r54441 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-19 12:02:48 -0700 (Mon, 19 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Patch #1683328: fixes and enhancements for "unparse" demo.
........
  r54456 | neal.norwitz | 2007-03-19 22:07:28 -0700 (Mon, 19 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Add some doc that was left out from some change to platform.py
........
  r54457 | neal.norwitz | 2007-03-19 22:08:23 -0700 (Mon, 19 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Add a comment about 3k migration
........
  r54458 | neal.norwitz | 2007-03-19 22:21:21 -0700 (Mon, 19 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Get rid of deprecation warning when testing commands.getstatus()
........
  r54459 | neal.norwitz | 2007-03-19 22:23:09 -0700 (Mon, 19 Mar 2007) | 4 lines

  Try backing out 54407 to see if it corrects the problems on the Windows
  buildbots.  This rev was backported, so we will need to keep both branches
  in sync, pending the outcome of the test after this checkin.
........
  r54460 | neal.norwitz | 2007-03-19 23:13:25 -0700 (Mon, 19 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Try to make this test more resistant to dropping from previous runs (ie, files that may exist but cause the test to fail).  Should be backported (assuming it works :-)
........
  r54461 | neal.norwitz | 2007-03-19 23:16:26 -0700 (Mon, 19 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Try to make this test more resistant to dropping from previous runs (ie, files that may exist but cause the test to fail).  Should be backported (assuming it works :-)
........
  r54462 | neal.norwitz | 2007-03-19 23:53:17 -0700 (Mon, 19 Mar 2007) | 5 lines

  Try to be a little more resilient to errors.  This might help the test
  pass, but my guess is that it won't.  I'm guessing that some other
  test is leaving this file open which means it can't be removed
  under Windows AFAIK.
........
  r54463 | neal.norwitz | 2007-03-20 01:14:57 -0700 (Tue, 20 Mar 2007) | 8 lines

  Try to get test_urllib to pass on Windows by closing the file.
  I'm guessing that's the problem.  h.getfile() must be called *after*
  h.getreply() and the fp can be None.

  I'm not entirely convinced this is the best fix (or even correct).
  The buildbots will tell us if things improve or not.  I don't
  know if this needs to be backported (assuming it actually works).
........
  r54465 | raymond.hettinger | 2007-03-20 14:27:24 -0700 (Tue, 20 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Extend work on rev 52962 and 53829 eliminating redundant PyObject_Hash() calls and fixing set/dict interoperability.
........
  r54468 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-20 16:05:14 -0700 (Tue, 20 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Fix for glob.py if filesystem encoding is None.
........
  r54479 | neal.norwitz | 2007-03-20 23:39:48 -0700 (Tue, 20 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Remove unused file spotted by Paul Hankin
........
  r54480 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-21 02:00:39 -0700 (Wed, 21 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Patch #1682205: a TypeError while unpacking an iterable is no longer
  masked by a generic one with the message "unpack non-sequence".
........
  r54482 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-21 02:10:29 -0700 (Wed, 21 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  New test for rev. 54407 which only uses directories under TESTFN.
........
  r54483 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-21 02:16:53 -0700 (Wed, 21 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Patch #1684834: document some utility C API functions.
........
  r54485 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-21 04:51:25 -0700 (Wed, 21 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Fix #1684254: split BROWSER contents with shlex to avoid displaying 'URL'.
........
  r54487 | andrew.kuchling | 2007-03-21 07:32:43 -0700 (Wed, 21 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Add comments on maintenance of this file
........
  r54489 | andrew.kuchling | 2007-03-21 09:57:32 -0700 (Wed, 21 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Fix sentence, and fix typo in example
........
  r54490 | andrew.kuchling | 2007-03-21 09:59:20 -0700 (Wed, 21 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Put code examples at left margin instead of indenting them
........
  r54491 | facundo.batista | 2007-03-21 12:41:24 -0700 (Wed, 21 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Minor clarification, saying that blocking means no timeout (from bug #882297)
........
  r54492 | ziga.seilnacht | 2007-03-21 13:07:56 -0700 (Wed, 21 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Bug #1675967: re patterns pickled with older Python versions can
  now be unpickled. Will backport.
........
  r54495 | raymond.hettinger | 2007-03-21 13:33:57 -0700 (Wed, 21 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Add test and fix for fromkeys() optional argument.
........
  r54524 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-22 01:05:45 -0700 (Thu, 22 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Bug #1685704: use -m switch in timeit docs.
........
  r54533 | thomas.heller | 2007-03-22 12:44:31 -0700 (Thu, 22 Mar 2007) | 5 lines

  Back out "Patch #1643874: memory leak in ctypes fixed."

  The code in this patch leaves no way to give up the ownership of a
  BSTR instance.
........
  r54538 | thomas.heller | 2007-03-22 13:34:37 -0700 (Thu, 22 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Explain the purpose of the b_needsfree flag (forward ported from release25-maint).
........
  r54539 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-03-22 21:58:42 -0700 (Thu, 22 Mar 2007) | 12 lines

  - Bug #1683368: The object.__init__() and object.__new__() methods are
    now stricter in rejecting excess arguments.  The only time when
    either allows excess arguments is when it is not overridden and the
    other one is.  For backwards compatibility, when both are
    overridden, it is a deprecation warning (for now; maybe a Py3k
    warning later).

  When merging this into 3.0, the warnings should become errors.

  Note: without the change to string.py, lots of spurious warnings happen.
  What's going on there?
........
  r54540 | neal.norwitz | 2007-03-22 22:17:23 -0700 (Thu, 22 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Add Mark Dickinson for SF # 1675423.
........
  r54541 | martin.v.loewis | 2007-03-23 03:35:49 -0700 (Fri, 23 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Patch #1686451: Fix return type for PySequence_{Count,Index,Fast_GET_SIZE}.
  Will backport.
........
  r54543 | martin.v.loewis | 2007-03-23 06:27:15 -0700 (Fri, 23 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Bug #978833: Revert r50844, as it broke _socketobject.dup.
  Will backport.
........
  r54545 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-03-23 11:53:03 -0700 (Fri, 23 Mar 2007) | 8 lines

  Add a type.__init__() method that enforces the same signature as
  type.__new__(), and then calls object.__init__(cls), just to be anal.

  This allows us to restore the code in string.py's _TemplateMetaclass
  that called super(...).__init__(name, bases, dct), which I commented
  out yesterday since it broke due to the stricter argument checking
  added to object.__init__().
........
  r54546 | facundo.batista | 2007-03-23 11:54:07 -0700 (Fri, 23 Mar 2007) | 4 lines


  Added a 'create_connect()' function to socket.py, which creates a
  connection with an optional timeout, and modified httplib.py to
  use this function in HTTPConnection. Applies patch 1676823.
........
  r54547 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-03-23 12:39:01 -0700 (Fri, 23 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Add note about type.__init__().
........
  r54553 | thomas.heller | 2007-03-23 12:55:27 -0700 (Fri, 23 Mar 2007) | 5 lines

  Prevent creation (followed by a segfault) of array types when the size
  overflows the valid Py_ssize_t range.  Check return values of
  PyMem_Malloc.

  Will backport to release25-maint.
........
  r54555 | facundo.batista | 2007-03-23 13:23:08 -0700 (Fri, 23 Mar 2007) | 6 lines


  Surrounded with try/finally to socket's default timeout setting
  changes in the tests, so failing one test won't produce strange
  results in others. Also relaxed the timeout settings in the test
  (where actually the value didn't mean anything).
........
  r54556 | collin.winter | 2007-03-23 15:24:39 -0700 (Fri, 23 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Make test_relpath() pass on Windows.
........
  r54559 | ziga.seilnacht | 2007-03-24 07:24:26 -0700 (Sat, 24 Mar 2007) | 6 lines

  Patch #1489771: update syntax rules in Python Reference Manual.
  Python 2.5 added support for explicit relative import statements and
  yield expressions, which were missing in the manual.
  Also fix grammar productions that used the names from the Grammar file,
  markup that broke the generated grammar.txt, and wrap some lines that
  broke the pdf output.  Will backport.
........
  r54565 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-24 15:20:34 -0700 (Sat, 24 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Remove typo accent.
........
  r54566 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-24 15:27:56 -0700 (Sat, 24 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Revert accidental change.
........
  r54567 | brett.cannon | 2007-03-24 18:32:36 -0700 (Sat, 24 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Change the docs to no longer claim that unittest is preferred over doctest for
  regression tests.
........
  r54568 | facundo.batista | 2007-03-24 18:53:21 -0700 (Sat, 24 Mar 2007) | 4 lines


  Redone the tests, using the infrastructure already present
  for threading and socket serving.
........
  r54570 | facundo.batista | 2007-03-24 20:20:05 -0700 (Sat, 24 Mar 2007) | 3 lines


  Closing the HTTP connection after each test, and listening more.
........
  r54572 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-25 11:44:35 -0700 (Sun, 25 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Markup fix.
........
  r54573 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-25 12:04:55 -0700 (Sun, 25 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Markup fix.
........
  r54580 | facundo.batista | 2007-03-26 13:18:31 -0700 (Mon, 26 Mar 2007) | 5 lines


  Added an optional timeout to FTP class. Also I started a test_ftplib.py
  file to test the ftp lib (right now I included a basic test, the timeout
  one, and nothing else).
........
  r54581 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-26 13:28:28 -0700 (Mon, 26 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Some nits.
........
  r54582 | facundo.batista | 2007-03-26 13:56:09 -0700 (Mon, 26 Mar 2007) | 4 lines


  Forgot to add the file before the previous commit, here go
  the ftplib tests.
........
  r54585 | facundo.batista | 2007-03-27 11:23:21 -0700 (Tue, 27 Mar 2007) | 5 lines


  Added an optional timeout to poplib.POP3. Also created a
  test_poplib.py file with a basic test and the timeout
  ones. Docs are also updated.
........
  r54586 | facundo.batista | 2007-03-27 11:50:29 -0700 (Tue, 27 Mar 2007) | 3 lines


  The basic test cases of poplib.py.
........
  r54594 | facundo.batista | 2007-03-27 20:45:20 -0700 (Tue, 27 Mar 2007) | 4 lines


  Bug 1688393. Adds a control of negative values in
  socket.recvfrom, which caused an ugly crash.
........
  r54599 | facundo.batista | 2007-03-28 11:25:54 -0700 (Wed, 28 Mar 2007) | 5 lines


  Added timeout to smtplib (to SMTP and SMTP_SSL). Also created
  the test_smtplib.py file, with a basic test and the timeout
  ones. Docs are updated too.
........
  r54603 | collin.winter | 2007-03-28 16:34:06 -0700 (Wed, 28 Mar 2007) | 3 lines

  Consolidate patches #1690164, 1683397, and 1690169, all of which refactor XML-related test suites. The patches are applied together because they use a common output/xmltests file.
  Thanks to Jerry Seutter for all three patches.
........
  r54604 | collin.winter | 2007-03-28 19:28:16 -0700 (Wed, 28 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Make test_zipfile clean up its temporary files properly.
........
  r54605 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-29 00:41:32 -0700 (Thu, 29 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  These are actually methods.
........
  r54606 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-29 05:42:07 -0700 (Thu, 29 Mar 2007) | 4 lines

  In Windows' time.clock(), when QueryPerformanceFrequency() fails,
  the C lib's clock() is used, but it must be divided by CLOCKS_PER_SEC
  as for the POSIX implementation (thanks to #pypy).
........
  r54608 | facundo.batista | 2007-03-29 11:22:35 -0700 (Thu, 29 Mar 2007) | 5 lines


  Added timout parameter to telnetlib.Telnet. Also created
  test_telnetlib.py with a basic test and timeout ones.
  Docs are also updated.
........
  r54613 | facundo.batista | 2007-03-30 06:00:35 -0700 (Fri, 30 Mar 2007) | 4 lines


  Added the posibility to pass the timeout to FTP.connect, not only when
  instantiating the class. Docs and tests are updated.
........
  r54614 | collin.winter | 2007-03-30 07:01:25 -0700 (Fri, 30 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Bug #1688274: add documentation for C-level class objects.
........
  r54615 | marc-andre.lemburg | 2007-03-30 08:01:42 -0700 (Fri, 30 Mar 2007) | 4 lines

  Bump the patch level version of distutils since there were a few bug fixes since
  the 2.5.0 release.
........
  r54617 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-30 08:49:05 -0700 (Fri, 30 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Markup fix.
........
  r54618 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-30 10:39:39 -0700 (Fri, 30 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Label name fix.
........
  r54619 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-30 10:47:21 -0700 (Fri, 30 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Duplicate label fix.
........
  r54620 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-30 10:48:39 -0700 (Fri, 30 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Markup fix.
........
  r54623 | andrew.kuchling | 2007-03-30 11:00:15 -0700 (Fri, 30 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Add item.  (Oops, accidentally checked this in on my branch)
........
  r54624 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-30 12:01:38 -0700 (Fri, 30 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Duplicate label fix.
........
  r54625 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-30 12:14:02 -0700 (Fri, 30 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Markup fix.
........
  r54629 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-31 03:17:31 -0700 (Sat, 31 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  repair string literal.
........
  r54630 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-31 04:54:58 -0700 (Sat, 31 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Markup fix.
........
  r54631 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-31 04:58:36 -0700 (Sat, 31 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Duplicate label fix.
........
  r54632 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-31 04:59:54 -0700 (Sat, 31 Mar 2007) | 2 lines

  Typo fix.
........
  r54633 | neal.norwitz | 2007-03-31 11:54:18 -0700 (Sat, 31 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Fix method names.  Will backport.
........
  r54634 | georg.brandl | 2007-03-31 11:56:11 -0700 (Sat, 31 Mar 2007) | 4 lines

  Bug #1655392: don't add -L/usr/lib/pythonX.Y/config to the LDFLAGS
  returned by python-config if Python was built with --enable-shared
  because that prevented the shared library from being used.
........
  r54637 | collin.winter | 2007-03-31 12:31:34 -0700 (Sat, 31 Mar 2007) | 1 line

  Shut up an occaisonal buildbot error due to test files being left around.
........
  r54644 | neal.norwitz | 2007-04-01 11:24:22 -0700 (Sun, 01 Apr 2007) | 11 lines

  SF #1685563, MSVCCompiler creates redundant and long PATH strings

  If MSVCCompiler.initialize() was called multiple times, the path
  would get duplicated.  On Windows, this is a problem because the
  path is limited to 4k.  There's no benefit in adding a path multiple
  times, so prevent that from occuring.  We also normalize the path
  before checking for duplicates so things like /a and /a/ won't both
  be stored.

  Will backport.
........
  r54646 | brett.cannon | 2007-04-01 11:47:27 -0700 (Sun, 01 Apr 2007) | 8 lines

  time.strptime's caching of its locale object was being recreated when the
  locale changed but not used during the function call it was recreated during.

  The test in this checkin is untested (OS X does not have the proper locale
  support for me to test), although the fix for the bug this deals with
  was tested by the OP (#1290505).  Once the buildbots verify the test at least
  doesn't fail it becomes a backport candidate.
........
  r54647 | brett.cannon | 2007-04-01 12:46:19 -0700 (Sun, 01 Apr 2007) | 3 lines

  Fix the test for recreating the locale cache object by not worrying about if
  one of the test locales cannot be set.
........
  r54649 | georg.brandl | 2007-04-01 14:29:15 -0700 (Sun, 01 Apr 2007) | 2 lines

  Fix a lot of markup and meta-information glitches.
........
  r54650 | georg.brandl | 2007-04-01 14:39:52 -0700 (Sun, 01 Apr 2007) | 2 lines

  Another fix.
........
  r54651 | georg.brandl | 2007-04-01 15:39:10 -0700 (Sun, 01 Apr 2007) | 2 lines

  Lots of explicit class names for method and member descs.
........
  r54652 | georg.brandl | 2007-04-01 15:40:12 -0700 (Sun, 01 Apr 2007) | 2 lines

  Explicit class names.
........
  r54653 | georg.brandl | 2007-04-01 15:47:31 -0700 (Sun, 01 Apr 2007) | 2 lines

  Some semantic fixes.
........
  r54654 | georg.brandl | 2007-04-01 16:29:10 -0700 (Sun, 01 Apr 2007) | 2 lines

  Remove bogus entry.
........
  r54655 | georg.brandl | 2007-04-01 16:31:30 -0700 (Sun, 01 Apr 2007) | 2 lines

  Fix the class name of strings.
........
  r54658 | raymond.hettinger | 2007-04-02 10:29:30 -0700 (Mon, 02 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  SF #1693079:  Cannot save empty array in shelve
........
  r54663 | raymond.hettinger | 2007-04-02 15:54:21 -0700 (Mon, 02 Apr 2007) | 3 lines

  Array module's buffer interface can now handle empty arrays.
........
  r54664 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-04-02 16:55:37 -0700 (Mon, 02 Apr 2007) | 5 lines

  Fix warnings about object.__init__() signature.
  Two (test_array and test_descr) were bug IMO; the third (copy_reg)
  is a work-around which recognizes that object.__init__() doesn't do
  anything.
........
  r54666 | raymond.hettinger | 2007-04-02 17:02:11 -0700 (Mon, 02 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  SF 1602378 Clarify docstrings for bisect
........
  r54668 | raymond.hettinger | 2007-04-02 18:39:43 -0700 (Mon, 02 Apr 2007) | 3 lines

  SF #1382213:  Tutorial section 9.5.1 ignores MRO for new-style classes
........
  r54669 | matthias.klose | 2007-04-02 21:35:59 -0700 (Mon, 02 Apr 2007) | 4 lines

  - Fix an off-by-one bug in locale.strxfrm().

    patch taken from http://bugs.debian.org/416934.
........
  r54671 | georg.brandl | 2007-04-03 00:04:27 -0700 (Tue, 03 Apr 2007) | 9 lines

  Fix the strange case of

  \begin{methoddesc}[NNTP]{...}

  where

  \ifx#1\@undefined ended up comparing N and N, therefore executing
  the true part of the conditional, blowing up at \@undefined.
........
  r54672 | facundo.batista | 2007-04-03 07:05:08 -0700 (Tue, 03 Apr 2007) | 4 lines


  Now using unittest for the tests infraestructure. Also split the
  tests in those who need the network, and that who doesn't.
........
  r54673 | walter.doerwald | 2007-04-03 09:08:10 -0700 (Tue, 03 Apr 2007) | 4 lines

  Move the functionality for catching warnings in test_warnings.py into a separate
  class to that reusing the functionality in test_structmembers.py doesn't rerun
  the tests from test_warnings.py.
........
  r54674 | walter.doerwald | 2007-04-03 09:16:24 -0700 (Tue, 03 Apr 2007) | 2 lines

  Document that CatchWarningTests is reused by test_structmembers.py.
........
  r54675 | walter.doerwald | 2007-04-03 09:53:43 -0700 (Tue, 03 Apr 2007) | 4 lines

  Add tests for the filename.

  Test that the stacklevel is handled correctly.
........
  r54676 | facundo.batista | 2007-04-03 10:29:48 -0700 (Tue, 03 Apr 2007) | 6 lines


  Added a SSL server to test_socket_ssl.py to be able to test
  locally. Now, it checks if have openssl available and run
  those specific tests (it starts openssl at the beggining of
  all the tests and then kills it at the end).
........
  r54677 | walter.doerwald | 2007-04-03 11:33:29 -0700 (Tue, 03 Apr 2007) | 6 lines

  Implement a contextmanager test.test_support.catch_warning that can
  be used to catch the last warning issued by the warning framework.

  Change test_warnings.py and test_structmembers.py to use this
  new contextmanager.
........
  r54678 | facundo.batista | 2007-04-03 14:15:34 -0700 (Tue, 03 Apr 2007) | 4 lines


  Changed the whole structure of startup and checking if the
  server is available. Hope to not get more false alarms.
........
  r54681 | facundo.batista | 2007-04-04 07:10:40 -0700 (Wed, 04 Apr 2007) | 4 lines


  Fixed the way that the .pem files are looked for, and changed
  how to kill the process in win32 to use the _handle attribute.
........
  r54682 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-04-04 10:43:02 -0700 (Wed, 04 Apr 2007) | 4 lines

  Fix a race condition in this test -- instead of assuming that it will take
  the test server thread at most 0.5 seconds to get ready, use an event
  variable.
........
  r54683 | collin.winter | 2007-04-04 11:14:17 -0700 (Wed, 04 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  Clean up imports.
........
  r54684 | collin.winter | 2007-04-04 11:16:24 -0700 (Wed, 04 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  Stop using test_support.verify().
........
  r54685 | martin.v.loewis | 2007-04-04 11:30:36 -0700 (Wed, 04 Apr 2007) | 2 lines

  Bug #1686475: Support stat'ing open files on Windows again.
  Will backport to 2.5.
........
  r54687 | collin.winter | 2007-04-04 11:33:40 -0700 (Wed, 04 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  Make test_getopt use unittest.
........
  r54688 | collin.winter | 2007-04-04 11:36:30 -0700 (Wed, 04 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  Make test_softspace use unittest.
........
  r54689 | ziga.seilnacht | 2007-04-04 11:38:47 -0700 (Wed, 04 Apr 2007) | 2 lines

  Fix WalkTests.test_traversal() on Windows.  The cleanup in
  MakedirTests.setUp() can now be removed.
........
  r54695 | raymond.hettinger | 2007-04-05 11:00:03 -0700 (Thu, 05 Apr 2007) | 3 lines

  Bug #1563759: struct.unpack doens't support buffer protocol objects
........
  r54697 | collin.winter | 2007-04-05 13:05:07 -0700 (Thu, 05 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  Convert test_long_future to use unittest.
........
  r54698 | collin.winter | 2007-04-05 13:08:56 -0700 (Thu, 05 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  Convert test_normalization to use unittest.
........
  r54699 | andrew.kuchling | 2007-04-05 18:11:58 -0700 (Thu, 05 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  Some grammar fixes
........
  r54704 | collin.winter | 2007-04-06 12:27:40 -0700 (Fri, 06 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  Convert test_stringprep to use unittest.
........
  r54705 | collin.winter | 2007-04-06 12:32:32 -0700 (Fri, 06 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  Import cleanup in test_crypt.
........
  r54706 | collin.winter | 2007-04-06 13:00:05 -0700 (Fri, 06 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  Convert test_gc to use unittest.
........
  r54707 | collin.winter | 2007-04-06 13:03:11 -0700 (Fri, 06 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  Convert test_module to use unittest.
........
  r54711 | collin.winter | 2007-04-06 21:40:43 -0700 (Fri, 06 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  Convert test_fileinput to use unittest.
........
  r54712 | brett.cannon | 2007-04-07 21:29:32 -0700 (Sat, 07 Apr 2007) | 5 lines

  Doc that file.next() has undefined behaviour when called on a file opened with
  'w'.  Closes bug #1569057.

  To be backported once 2.5 branch is unfrozen.
........
  r54726 | vinay.sajip | 2007-04-09 09:16:10 -0700 (Mon, 09 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  Added optional timeout to SocketHandler.makeSocket (SF #1695948)
........
  r54727 | ziga.seilnacht | 2007-04-09 12:10:29 -0700 (Mon, 09 Apr 2007) | 3 lines

  Patch #1695862: remove old test directory that causes test_urllib failures
  on Windows buildbots.  The change is a one time fix and will be removed
  after a successful buildbot run.
........
  r54729 | facundo.batista | 2007-04-09 20:00:37 -0700 (Mon, 09 Apr 2007) | 3 lines


  Minor fix to the tests pass ok even with -O.
........
  r54730 | collin.winter | 2007-04-09 21:44:49 -0700 (Mon, 09 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  Typo fix.
........
  r54732 | facundo.batista | 2007-04-10 05:58:45 -0700 (Tue, 10 Apr 2007) | 5 lines


  General clean-up. Lot of margin corrections, comments, some typos.
  Exceptions now are raised in the new style. And a mockup class is
  now also new style. Thanks Santiago Pereson.
........
  r54741 | georg.brandl | 2007-04-10 14:39:38 -0700 (Tue, 10 Apr 2007) | 2 lines

  Repair a duplicate label and some obsolete uses of \setindexsubitem.
........
  r54746 | andrew.kuchling | 2007-04-11 06:39:00 -0700 (Wed, 11 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  Add window.chgat() method, submitted via e-mail by Fabian Kreutz
........
  r54747 | andrew.kuchling | 2007-04-11 06:42:25 -0700 (Wed, 11 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  Point readers at the patch submission instructions
........
  r54748 | andrew.kuchling | 2007-04-11 06:47:13 -0700 (Wed, 11 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  Describe undocumented third argument to touchline()
........
  r54757 | georg.brandl | 2007-04-11 10:16:24 -0700 (Wed, 11 Apr 2007) | 3 lines

  Add some missing NULL checks which trigger crashes on low-memory conditions.
  Found by Victor Stinner. Will backport when 2.5 branch is unfrozen.
........
  r54760 | raymond.hettinger | 2007-04-11 11:40:58 -0700 (Wed, 11 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  SF 1191699:  Make slices picklable
........
  r54762 | georg.brandl | 2007-04-11 12:25:11 -0700 (Wed, 11 Apr 2007) | 2 lines

  Exceptions are no longer old-style instances. Fix accordingly.
........
  r54763 | georg.brandl | 2007-04-11 16:28:44 -0700 (Wed, 11 Apr 2007) | 2 lines

  Repair missing spaces after \UNIX.
........
  r54772 | raymond.hettinger | 2007-04-11 21:10:00 -0700 (Wed, 11 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  SF 1193128:  Let str.translate(None) be an identity transformation
........
  r54784 | georg.brandl | 2007-04-12 00:01:19 -0700 (Thu, 12 Apr 2007) | 2 lines

  Patch #1698951: clarify deprecation message in rexec and Bastion
........
  r54785 | ziga.seilnacht | 2007-04-12 01:46:51 -0700 (Thu, 12 Apr 2007) | 2 lines

  Patch #1695862: remove the cleanup code, now that Windows buildbots are green
  again.
........
  r54786 | walter.doerwald | 2007-04-12 03:35:00 -0700 (Thu, 12 Apr 2007) | 3 lines

  Fix utf-8-sig incremental decoder, which didn't recognise a BOM when the
  first chunk fed to the decoder started with a BOM, but was longer than 3 bytes.
........
  r54807 | barry.warsaw | 2007-04-13 11:47:14 -0700 (Fri, 13 Apr 2007) | 8 lines

  Port r54805 from python25-maint branch:

  Add code to read from master_fd in the parent, breaking when we get an OSError
  (EIO can occur on Linux) or there's no more data to read.  Without this,
  test_pty.py can hang on the waitpid() because the child is blocking on the
  stdout write.  This will definitely happen on Mac OS X and could potentially
  happen on other platforms.  See the comment for details.
........
  r54812 | kristjan.jonsson | 2007-04-13 15:07:33 -0700 (Fri, 13 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  Fix a bug when using the __lltrace__ opcode tracer, and a problem sith signed chars in frameobject.c which can occur with opcodes > 127
........
  r54814 | kristjan.jonsson | 2007-04-13 15:20:13 -0700 (Fri, 13 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  Fix potential crash in path manipulation on windows
........
  r54816 | trent.mick | 2007-04-13 16:22:05 -0700 (Fri, 13 Apr 2007) | 4 lines

  Add the necessary dependency for the Windows VC6 build to ensure 'pythoncore'
  is built before '_ctypes' is attempted.
  Will backport to 2.5 once it is unfrozen for 2.5.1.
........
  r54825 | neal.norwitz | 2007-04-13 22:25:50 -0700 (Fri, 13 Apr 2007) | 3 lines

  When __slots__ are set to a unicode string, make it work the same as
  setting a plain string, ie don't expand to single letter identifiers.
........
  r54841 | neal.norwitz | 2007-04-16 00:37:55 -0700 (Mon, 16 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  SF #1701207, Fix bogus assertion (and test it!)
........
  r54844 | collin.winter | 2007-04-16 15:10:32 -0700 (Mon, 16 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  Check the availability of the urlfetch resource earlier than before.
........
  r54849 | martin.v.loewis | 2007-04-16 22:02:01 -0700 (Mon, 16 Apr 2007) | 2 lines

  Add Travis Oliphant.
........
  r54873 | brett.cannon | 2007-04-18 20:44:17 -0700 (Wed, 18 Apr 2007) | 2 lines

  Silence a compiler warning about incompatible pointer types.
........
  r54874 | neal.norwitz | 2007-04-18 22:52:37 -0700 (Wed, 18 Apr 2007) | 2 lines

  SF #1703270, add missing declaration in readline.c to avoid compiler warning.
........
  r54875 | armin.rigo | 2007-04-19 07:44:48 -0700 (Thu, 19 Apr 2007) | 8 lines

  Revert r53997 as per
  http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2007-March/071796.html .

  I've kept a couple of still-valid extra tests in test_descr, but didn't
  bother to sort through the new comments and refactorings added in r53997
  to see if some of them could be kept.  If so, they could go in a
  follow-up check-in.
........
  r54876 | armin.rigo | 2007-04-19 07:56:48 -0700 (Thu, 19 Apr 2007) | 2 lines

  Fix a usage of the dangerous pattern decref - modify field - incref.
........
  r54884 | neal.norwitz | 2007-04-19 22:20:38 -0700 (Thu, 19 Apr 2007) | 9 lines

  Add an optional address to copy the failure mails to.

  Detect a conflict in the only file that should have outstanding changes
  when this script is run.  This doesn't matter on the trunk, but does
  when run on a branch.  Trunk always has the date set to today in
  boilerplate.tex.  Each time a release is cut with a different date,
  a conflict occurs.  (We could copy a known good version, but then
  we would lose changes to this file.)
........
  r54918 | georg.brandl | 2007-04-21 13:35:38 -0700 (Sat, 21 Apr 2007) | 3 lines

  Bug #1704790: bind name "sys" locally in __del__ method so that it is
  not cleared before __del__ is run.
........
  r54920 | facundo.batista | 2007-04-21 18:18:56 -0700 (Sat, 21 Apr 2007) | 5 lines


  Added tests for other methods of SSL object. Now we cover
  all the object methods. This is the final step to close
  the #451607 bug.
........
  r54927 | facundo.batista | 2007-04-23 10:08:31 -0700 (Mon, 23 Apr 2007) | 5 lines


  As specified in RFC 2616, 2xx code indicates that the client's
  request was successfully received, understood, and accepted.
  Now in these cases no error is raised. Also fixed tests.
........
  r54929 | collin.winter | 2007-04-23 20:43:46 -0700 (Mon, 23 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  Convert PyUnit -> unittest.
........
  r54931 | collin.winter | 2007-04-23 21:09:52 -0700 (Mon, 23 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  Remove code that hasn't been called in years.
........
  r54932 | neal.norwitz | 2007-04-23 21:53:12 -0700 (Mon, 23 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  Fix SF #1703110, Incorrect example for add_password() (use uri, not host)
........
  r54934 | georg.brandl | 2007-04-24 03:36:42 -0700 (Tue, 24 Apr 2007) | 2 lines

  Some new year updates.
........
  r54938 | facundo.batista | 2007-04-24 06:54:38 -0700 (Tue, 24 Apr 2007) | 4 lines


  Added a comment about last change in urllib2.py (all 2xx responses
  are ok now).
........
  r54939 | georg.brandl | 2007-04-24 08:10:09 -0700 (Tue, 24 Apr 2007) | 2 lines

  Bug #1705717: error in sys.argv docs.
........
  r54941 | georg.brandl | 2007-04-24 08:27:13 -0700 (Tue, 24 Apr 2007) | 4 lines

  Bug #1706381: Specifying the SWIG option "-c++" in the setup.py file
  (as opposed to the command line) will now write file names ending in
  ".cpp" too.
........
  r54944 | raymond.hettinger | 2007-04-24 15:13:43 -0700 (Tue, 24 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  Fix markup
........
  r54945 | kristjan.jonsson | 2007-04-24 17:10:50 -0700 (Tue, 24 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  Merge change 54909 from release25-maint:  Fix several minor issues discovered using code analysis in VisualStudio 2005 Team Edition
........
  r54947 | kristjan.jonsson | 2007-04-24 17:17:39 -0700 (Tue, 24 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  Make pythoncore compile cleanly with VisualStudio 2005.  Used an explicit typecast to get a 64 bit integer, and undefined the Yield macro that conflicts with winbase.h
........
  r54948 | kristjan.jonsson | 2007-04-24 17:19:26 -0700 (Tue, 24 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  Remove obsolete comment. Importing of .dll files has been discontinued, only .pyd files supported on windows now.
........
  r54949 | georg.brandl | 2007-04-24 23:24:59 -0700 (Tue, 24 Apr 2007) | 2 lines

  Patch #1698768: updated the "using Python on the Mac" intro.
........
  r54951 | georg.brandl | 2007-04-24 23:25:55 -0700 (Tue, 24 Apr 2007) | 2 lines

  Markup fix.
........
  r54953 | neal.norwitz | 2007-04-24 23:30:05 -0700 (Tue, 24 Apr 2007) | 3 lines

  Whitespace normalization.  Ugh, we really need to do this more often.
  You might want to review this change as it's my first time.  Be gentle. :-)
........
  r54956 | collin.winter | 2007-04-25 10:29:52 -0700 (Wed, 25 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  Standardize on test.test_support.run_unittest() (as opposed to a mix of run_unittest() and run_suite()). Also, add functionality to run_unittest() that admits usage of unittest.TestLoader.loadTestsFromModule().
........
  r54957 | collin.winter | 2007-04-25 10:37:35 -0700 (Wed, 25 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  Remove functionality from test_datetime.test_main() that does reference count checking; 'regrtest.py -R' is the way to do this kind of testing.
........
  r54958 | collin.winter | 2007-04-25 10:57:53 -0700 (Wed, 25 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  Change test_support.have_unicode to use True/False instead of 1/0.
........
  r54959 | tim.peters | 2007-04-25 11:47:18 -0700 (Wed, 25 Apr 2007) | 2 lines

  Whitespace normalization.
........
  r54960 | tim.peters | 2007-04-25 11:48:35 -0700 (Wed, 25 Apr 2007) | 2 lines

  Set missing svn:eol-style property on text files.
........
  r54961 | collin.winter | 2007-04-25 11:54:36 -0700 (Wed, 25 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  Import and raise statement cleanup.
........
  r54969 | collin.winter | 2007-04-25 13:41:34 -0700 (Wed, 25 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  Convert test_ossaudiodev to use unittest.
........
  r54974 | collin.winter | 2007-04-25 14:50:25 -0700 (Wed, 25 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  Fix an issue related to the unittest conversion.
........
  r54979 | fred.drake | 2007-04-25 21:42:19 -0700 (Wed, 25 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  fix some markup errors
........
  r54982 | kristjan.jonsson | 2007-04-26 02:15:08 -0700 (Thu, 26 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  Export function sanitize_the_mode from fileobject.c as _PyFile_SanitizeMode().  Use this function in posixmodule.c when implementing fdopen().  This fixes test_subprocess.py for a VisualStudio 2005 compile.
........
  r54983 | kristjan.jonsson | 2007-04-26 06:44:16 -0700 (Thu, 26 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  The locale "En" appears not to be valid on windows underi VisualStudio.2005.  Added "English" to the test_locale.py to make the testsuite pass for that build
........
  r54984 | steve.holden | 2007-04-26 07:23:12 -0700 (Thu, 26 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  Minor wording change on slicing aide-memoire.
........
  r54985 | kristjan.jonsson | 2007-04-26 08:24:54 -0700 (Thu, 26 Apr 2007) | 1 line

  Accomodate 64 bit time_t in the _bsddb module.
........
2007-04-27 19:54:29 +00:00

2020 lines
79 KiB
Python

#! /usr/bin/env python
"""
Module difflib -- helpers for computing deltas between objects.
Function get_close_matches(word, possibilities, n=3, cutoff=0.6):
Use SequenceMatcher to return list of the best "good enough" matches.
Function context_diff(a, b):
For two lists of strings, return a delta in context diff format.
Function ndiff(a, b):
Return a delta: the difference between `a` and `b` (lists of strings).
Function restore(delta, which):
Return one of the two sequences that generated an ndiff delta.
Function unified_diff(a, b):
For two lists of strings, return a delta in unified diff format.
Class SequenceMatcher:
A flexible class for comparing pairs of sequences of any type.
Class Differ:
For producing human-readable deltas from sequences of lines of text.
Class HtmlDiff:
For producing HTML side by side comparison with change highlights.
"""
__all__ = ['get_close_matches', 'ndiff', 'restore', 'SequenceMatcher',
'Differ','IS_CHARACTER_JUNK', 'IS_LINE_JUNK', 'context_diff',
'unified_diff', 'HtmlDiff']
import heapq
def _calculate_ratio(matches, length):
if length:
return 2.0 * matches / length
return 1.0
class SequenceMatcher:
"""
SequenceMatcher is a flexible class for comparing pairs of sequences of
any type, so long as the sequence elements are hashable. The basic
algorithm predates, and is a little fancier than, an algorithm
published in the late 1980's by Ratcliff and Obershelp under the
hyperbolic name "gestalt pattern matching". The basic idea is to find
the longest contiguous matching subsequence that contains no "junk"
elements (R-O doesn't address junk). The same idea is then applied
recursively to the pieces of the sequences to the left and to the right
of the matching subsequence. This does not yield minimal edit
sequences, but does tend to yield matches that "look right" to people.
SequenceMatcher tries to compute a "human-friendly diff" between two
sequences. Unlike e.g. UNIX(tm) diff, the fundamental notion is the
longest *contiguous* & junk-free matching subsequence. That's what
catches peoples' eyes. The Windows(tm) windiff has another interesting
notion, pairing up elements that appear uniquely in each sequence.
That, and the method here, appear to yield more intuitive difference
reports than does diff. This method appears to be the least vulnerable
to synching up on blocks of "junk lines", though (like blank lines in
ordinary text files, or maybe "<P>" lines in HTML files). That may be
because this is the only method of the 3 that has a *concept* of
"junk" <wink>.
Example, comparing two strings, and considering blanks to be "junk":
>>> s = SequenceMatcher(lambda x: x == " ",
... "private Thread currentThread;",
... "private volatile Thread currentThread;")
>>>
.ratio() returns a float in [0, 1], measuring the "similarity" of the
sequences. As a rule of thumb, a .ratio() value over 0.6 means the
sequences are close matches:
>>> print(round(s.ratio(), 3))
0.866
>>>
If you're only interested in where the sequences match,
.get_matching_blocks() is handy:
>>> for block in s.get_matching_blocks():
... print("a[%d] and b[%d] match for %d elements" % block)
a[0] and b[0] match for 8 elements
a[8] and b[17] match for 21 elements
a[29] and b[38] match for 0 elements
Note that the last tuple returned by .get_matching_blocks() is always a
dummy, (len(a), len(b), 0), and this is the only case in which the last
tuple element (number of elements matched) is 0.
If you want to know how to change the first sequence into the second,
use .get_opcodes():
>>> for opcode in s.get_opcodes():
... print("%6s a[%d:%d] b[%d:%d]" % opcode)
equal a[0:8] b[0:8]
insert a[8:8] b[8:17]
equal a[8:29] b[17:38]
See the Differ class for a fancy human-friendly file differencer, which
uses SequenceMatcher both to compare sequences of lines, and to compare
sequences of characters within similar (near-matching) lines.
See also function get_close_matches() in this module, which shows how
simple code building on SequenceMatcher can be used to do useful work.
Timing: Basic R-O is cubic time worst case and quadratic time expected
case. SequenceMatcher is quadratic time for the worst case and has
expected-case behavior dependent in a complicated way on how many
elements the sequences have in common; best case time is linear.
Methods:
__init__(isjunk=None, a='', b='')
Construct a SequenceMatcher.
set_seqs(a, b)
Set the two sequences to be compared.
set_seq1(a)
Set the first sequence to be compared.
set_seq2(b)
Set the second sequence to be compared.
find_longest_match(alo, ahi, blo, bhi)
Find longest matching block in a[alo:ahi] and b[blo:bhi].
get_matching_blocks()
Return list of triples describing matching subsequences.
get_opcodes()
Return list of 5-tuples describing how to turn a into b.
ratio()
Return a measure of the sequences' similarity (float in [0,1]).
quick_ratio()
Return an upper bound on .ratio() relatively quickly.
real_quick_ratio()
Return an upper bound on ratio() very quickly.
"""
def __init__(self, isjunk=None, a='', b=''):
"""Construct a SequenceMatcher.
Optional arg isjunk is None (the default), or a one-argument
function that takes a sequence element and returns true iff the
element is junk. None is equivalent to passing "lambda x: 0", i.e.
no elements are considered to be junk. For example, pass
lambda x: x in " \\t"
if you're comparing lines as sequences of characters, and don't
want to synch up on blanks or hard tabs.
Optional arg a is the first of two sequences to be compared. By
default, an empty string. The elements of a must be hashable. See
also .set_seqs() and .set_seq1().
Optional arg b is the second of two sequences to be compared. By
default, an empty string. The elements of b must be hashable. See
also .set_seqs() and .set_seq2().
"""
# Members:
# a
# first sequence
# b
# second sequence; differences are computed as "what do
# we need to do to 'a' to change it into 'b'?"
# b2j
# for x in b, b2j[x] is a list of the indices (into b)
# at which x appears; junk elements do not appear
# fullbcount
# for x in b, fullbcount[x] == the number of times x
# appears in b; only materialized if really needed (used
# only for computing quick_ratio())
# matching_blocks
# a list of (i, j, k) triples, where a[i:i+k] == b[j:j+k];
# ascending & non-overlapping in i and in j; terminated by
# a dummy (len(a), len(b), 0) sentinel
# opcodes
# a list of (tag, i1, i2, j1, j2) tuples, where tag is
# one of
# 'replace' a[i1:i2] should be replaced by b[j1:j2]
# 'delete' a[i1:i2] should be deleted
# 'insert' b[j1:j2] should be inserted
# 'equal' a[i1:i2] == b[j1:j2]
# isjunk
# a user-supplied function taking a sequence element and
# returning true iff the element is "junk" -- this has
# subtle but helpful effects on the algorithm, which I'll
# get around to writing up someday <0.9 wink>.
# DON'T USE! Only __chain_b uses this. Use isbjunk.
# isbjunk
# for x in b, isbjunk(x) == isjunk(x) but much faster;
# it's really the __contains__ method of a hidden dict.
# DOES NOT WORK for x in a!
# isbpopular
# for x in b, isbpopular(x) is true iff b is reasonably long
# (at least 200 elements) and x accounts for more than 1% of
# its elements. DOES NOT WORK for x in a!
self.isjunk = isjunk
self.a = self.b = None
self.set_seqs(a, b)
def set_seqs(self, a, b):
"""Set the two sequences to be compared.
>>> s = SequenceMatcher()
>>> s.set_seqs("abcd", "bcde")
>>> s.ratio()
0.75
"""
self.set_seq1(a)
self.set_seq2(b)
def set_seq1(self, a):
"""Set the first sequence to be compared.
The second sequence to be compared is not changed.
>>> s = SequenceMatcher(None, "abcd", "bcde")
>>> s.ratio()
0.75
>>> s.set_seq1("bcde")
>>> s.ratio()
1.0
>>>
SequenceMatcher computes and caches detailed information about the
second sequence, so if you want to compare one sequence S against
many sequences, use .set_seq2(S) once and call .set_seq1(x)
repeatedly for each of the other sequences.
See also set_seqs() and set_seq2().
"""
if a is self.a:
return
self.a = a
self.matching_blocks = self.opcodes = None
def set_seq2(self, b):
"""Set the second sequence to be compared.
The first sequence to be compared is not changed.
>>> s = SequenceMatcher(None, "abcd", "bcde")
>>> s.ratio()
0.75
>>> s.set_seq2("abcd")
>>> s.ratio()
1.0
>>>
SequenceMatcher computes and caches detailed information about the
second sequence, so if you want to compare one sequence S against
many sequences, use .set_seq2(S) once and call .set_seq1(x)
repeatedly for each of the other sequences.
See also set_seqs() and set_seq1().
"""
if b is self.b:
return
self.b = b
self.matching_blocks = self.opcodes = None
self.fullbcount = None
self.__chain_b()
# For each element x in b, set b2j[x] to a list of the indices in
# b where x appears; the indices are in increasing order; note that
# the number of times x appears in b is len(b2j[x]) ...
# when self.isjunk is defined, junk elements don't show up in this
# map at all, which stops the central find_longest_match method
# from starting any matching block at a junk element ...
# also creates the fast isbjunk function ...
# b2j also does not contain entries for "popular" elements, meaning
# elements that account for more than 1% of the total elements, and
# when the sequence is reasonably large (>= 200 elements); this can
# be viewed as an adaptive notion of semi-junk, and yields an enormous
# speedup when, e.g., comparing program files with hundreds of
# instances of "return NULL;" ...
# note that this is only called when b changes; so for cross-product
# kinds of matches, it's best to call set_seq2 once, then set_seq1
# repeatedly
def __chain_b(self):
# Because isjunk is a user-defined (not C) function, and we test
# for junk a LOT, it's important to minimize the number of calls.
# Before the tricks described here, __chain_b was by far the most
# time-consuming routine in the whole module! If anyone sees
# Jim Roskind, thank him again for profile.py -- I never would
# have guessed that.
# The first trick is to build b2j ignoring the possibility
# of junk. I.e., we don't call isjunk at all yet. Throwing
# out the junk later is much cheaper than building b2j "right"
# from the start.
b = self.b
n = len(b)
self.b2j = b2j = {}
populardict = {}
for i, elt in enumerate(b):
if elt in b2j:
indices = b2j[elt]
if n >= 200 and len(indices) * 100 > n:
populardict[elt] = 1
del indices[:]
else:
indices.append(i)
else:
b2j[elt] = [i]
# Purge leftover indices for popular elements.
for elt in populardict:
del b2j[elt]
# Now b2j.keys() contains elements uniquely, and especially when
# the sequence is a string, that's usually a good deal smaller
# than len(string). The difference is the number of isjunk calls
# saved.
isjunk = self.isjunk
junkdict = {}
if isjunk:
for d in populardict, b2j:
for elt in list(d.keys()):
if isjunk(elt):
junkdict[elt] = 1
del d[elt]
# Now for x in b, isjunk(x) == x in junkdict, but the
# latter is much faster. Note too that while there may be a
# lot of junk in the sequence, the number of *unique* junk
# elements is probably small. So the memory burden of keeping
# this dict alive is likely trivial compared to the size of b2j.
self.isbjunk = junkdict.__contains__
self.isbpopular = populardict.__contains__
def find_longest_match(self, alo, ahi, blo, bhi):
"""Find longest matching block in a[alo:ahi] and b[blo:bhi].
If isjunk is not defined:
Return (i,j,k) such that a[i:i+k] is equal to b[j:j+k], where
alo <= i <= i+k <= ahi
blo <= j <= j+k <= bhi
and for all (i',j',k') meeting those conditions,
k >= k'
i <= i'
and if i == i', j <= j'
In other words, of all maximal matching blocks, return one that
starts earliest in a, and of all those maximal matching blocks that
start earliest in a, return the one that starts earliest in b.
>>> s = SequenceMatcher(None, " abcd", "abcd abcd")
>>> s.find_longest_match(0, 5, 0, 9)
(0, 4, 5)
If isjunk is defined, first the longest matching block is
determined as above, but with the additional restriction that no
junk element appears in the block. Then that block is extended as
far as possible by matching (only) junk elements on both sides. So
the resulting block never matches on junk except as identical junk
happens to be adjacent to an "interesting" match.
Here's the same example as before, but considering blanks to be
junk. That prevents " abcd" from matching the " abcd" at the tail
end of the second sequence directly. Instead only the "abcd" can
match, and matches the leftmost "abcd" in the second sequence:
>>> s = SequenceMatcher(lambda x: x==" ", " abcd", "abcd abcd")
>>> s.find_longest_match(0, 5, 0, 9)
(1, 0, 4)
If no blocks match, return (alo, blo, 0).
>>> s = SequenceMatcher(None, "ab", "c")
>>> s.find_longest_match(0, 2, 0, 1)
(0, 0, 0)
"""
# CAUTION: stripping common prefix or suffix would be incorrect.
# E.g.,
# ab
# acab
# Longest matching block is "ab", but if common prefix is
# stripped, it's "a" (tied with "b"). UNIX(tm) diff does so
# strip, so ends up claiming that ab is changed to acab by
# inserting "ca" in the middle. That's minimal but unintuitive:
# "it's obvious" that someone inserted "ac" at the front.
# Windiff ends up at the same place as diff, but by pairing up
# the unique 'b's and then matching the first two 'a's.
a, b, b2j, isbjunk = self.a, self.b, self.b2j, self.isbjunk
besti, bestj, bestsize = alo, blo, 0
# find longest junk-free match
# during an iteration of the loop, j2len[j] = length of longest
# junk-free match ending with a[i-1] and b[j]
j2len = {}
nothing = []
for i in xrange(alo, ahi):
# look at all instances of a[i] in b; note that because
# b2j has no junk keys, the loop is skipped if a[i] is junk
j2lenget = j2len.get
newj2len = {}
for j in b2j.get(a[i], nothing):
# a[i] matches b[j]
if j < blo:
continue
if j >= bhi:
break
k = newj2len[j] = j2lenget(j-1, 0) + 1
if k > bestsize:
besti, bestj, bestsize = i-k+1, j-k+1, k
j2len = newj2len
# Extend the best by non-junk elements on each end. In particular,
# "popular" non-junk elements aren't in b2j, which greatly speeds
# the inner loop above, but also means "the best" match so far
# doesn't contain any junk *or* popular non-junk elements.
while besti > alo and bestj > blo and \
not isbjunk(b[bestj-1]) and \
a[besti-1] == b[bestj-1]:
besti, bestj, bestsize = besti-1, bestj-1, bestsize+1
while besti+bestsize < ahi and bestj+bestsize < bhi and \
not isbjunk(b[bestj+bestsize]) and \
a[besti+bestsize] == b[bestj+bestsize]:
bestsize += 1
# Now that we have a wholly interesting match (albeit possibly
# empty!), we may as well suck up the matching junk on each
# side of it too. Can't think of a good reason not to, and it
# saves post-processing the (possibly considerable) expense of
# figuring out what to do with it. In the case of an empty
# interesting match, this is clearly the right thing to do,
# because no other kind of match is possible in the regions.
while besti > alo and bestj > blo and \
isbjunk(b[bestj-1]) and \
a[besti-1] == b[bestj-1]:
besti, bestj, bestsize = besti-1, bestj-1, bestsize+1
while besti+bestsize < ahi and bestj+bestsize < bhi and \
isbjunk(b[bestj+bestsize]) and \
a[besti+bestsize] == b[bestj+bestsize]:
bestsize = bestsize + 1
return besti, bestj, bestsize
def get_matching_blocks(self):
"""Return list of triples describing matching subsequences.
Each triple is of the form (i, j, n), and means that
a[i:i+n] == b[j:j+n]. The triples are monotonically increasing in
i and in j. New in Python 2.5, it's also guaranteed that if
(i, j, n) and (i', j', n') are adjacent triples in the list, and
the second is not the last triple in the list, then i+n != i' or
j+n != j'. IOW, adjacent triples never describe adjacent equal
blocks.
The last triple is a dummy, (len(a), len(b), 0), and is the only
triple with n==0.
>>> s = SequenceMatcher(None, "abxcd", "abcd")
>>> s.get_matching_blocks()
[(0, 0, 2), (3, 2, 2), (5, 4, 0)]
"""
if self.matching_blocks is not None:
return self.matching_blocks
la, lb = len(self.a), len(self.b)
# This is most naturally expressed as a recursive algorithm, but
# at least one user bumped into extreme use cases that exceeded
# the recursion limit on their box. So, now we maintain a list
# ('queue`) of blocks we still need to look at, and append partial
# results to `matching_blocks` in a loop; the matches are sorted
# at the end.
queue = [(0, la, 0, lb)]
matching_blocks = []
while queue:
alo, ahi, blo, bhi = queue.pop()
i, j, k = x = self.find_longest_match(alo, ahi, blo, bhi)
# a[alo:i] vs b[blo:j] unknown
# a[i:i+k] same as b[j:j+k]
# a[i+k:ahi] vs b[j+k:bhi] unknown
if k: # if k is 0, there was no matching block
matching_blocks.append(x)
if alo < i and blo < j:
queue.append((alo, i, blo, j))
if i+k < ahi and j+k < bhi:
queue.append((i+k, ahi, j+k, bhi))
matching_blocks.sort()
# It's possible that we have adjacent equal blocks in the
# matching_blocks list now. Starting with 2.5, this code was added
# to collapse them.
i1 = j1 = k1 = 0
non_adjacent = []
for i2, j2, k2 in matching_blocks:
# Is this block adjacent to i1, j1, k1?
if i1 + k1 == i2 and j1 + k1 == j2:
# Yes, so collapse them -- this just increases the length of
# the first block by the length of the second, and the first
# block so lengthened remains the block to compare against.
k1 += k2
else:
# Not adjacent. Remember the first block (k1==0 means it's
# the dummy we started with), and make the second block the
# new block to compare against.
if k1:
non_adjacent.append((i1, j1, k1))
i1, j1, k1 = i2, j2, k2
if k1:
non_adjacent.append((i1, j1, k1))
non_adjacent.append( (la, lb, 0) )
self.matching_blocks = non_adjacent
return self.matching_blocks
def get_opcodes(self):
"""Return list of 5-tuples describing how to turn a into b.
Each tuple is of the form (tag, i1, i2, j1, j2). The first tuple
has i1 == j1 == 0, and remaining tuples have i1 == the i2 from the
tuple preceding it, and likewise for j1 == the previous j2.
The tags are strings, with these meanings:
'replace': a[i1:i2] should be replaced by b[j1:j2]
'delete': a[i1:i2] should be deleted.
Note that j1==j2 in this case.
'insert': b[j1:j2] should be inserted at a[i1:i1].
Note that i1==i2 in this case.
'equal': a[i1:i2] == b[j1:j2]
>>> a = "qabxcd"
>>> b = "abycdf"
>>> s = SequenceMatcher(None, a, b)
>>> for tag, i1, i2, j1, j2 in s.get_opcodes():
... print(("%7s a[%d:%d] (%s) b[%d:%d] (%s)" %
... (tag, i1, i2, a[i1:i2], j1, j2, b[j1:j2])))
delete a[0:1] (q) b[0:0] ()
equal a[1:3] (ab) b[0:2] (ab)
replace a[3:4] (x) b[2:3] (y)
equal a[4:6] (cd) b[3:5] (cd)
insert a[6:6] () b[5:6] (f)
"""
if self.opcodes is not None:
return self.opcodes
i = j = 0
self.opcodes = answer = []
for ai, bj, size in self.get_matching_blocks():
# invariant: we've pumped out correct diffs to change
# a[:i] into b[:j], and the next matching block is
# a[ai:ai+size] == b[bj:bj+size]. So we need to pump
# out a diff to change a[i:ai] into b[j:bj], pump out
# the matching block, and move (i,j) beyond the match
tag = ''
if i < ai and j < bj:
tag = 'replace'
elif i < ai:
tag = 'delete'
elif j < bj:
tag = 'insert'
if tag:
answer.append( (tag, i, ai, j, bj) )
i, j = ai+size, bj+size
# the list of matching blocks is terminated by a
# sentinel with size 0
if size:
answer.append( ('equal', ai, i, bj, j) )
return answer
def get_grouped_opcodes(self, n=3):
""" Isolate change clusters by eliminating ranges with no changes.
Return a generator of groups with upto n lines of context.
Each group is in the same format as returned by get_opcodes().
>>> from pprint import pprint
>>> a = map(str, range(1,40))
>>> b = a[:]
>>> b[8:8] = ['i'] # Make an insertion
>>> b[20] += 'x' # Make a replacement
>>> b[23:28] = [] # Make a deletion
>>> b[30] += 'y' # Make another replacement
>>> pprint(list(SequenceMatcher(None,a,b).get_grouped_opcodes()))
[[('equal', 5, 8, 5, 8), ('insert', 8, 8, 8, 9), ('equal', 8, 11, 9, 12)],
[('equal', 16, 19, 17, 20),
('replace', 19, 20, 20, 21),
('equal', 20, 22, 21, 23),
('delete', 22, 27, 23, 23),
('equal', 27, 30, 23, 26)],
[('equal', 31, 34, 27, 30),
('replace', 34, 35, 30, 31),
('equal', 35, 38, 31, 34)]]
"""
codes = self.get_opcodes()
if not codes:
codes = [("equal", 0, 1, 0, 1)]
# Fixup leading and trailing groups if they show no changes.
if codes[0][0] == 'equal':
tag, i1, i2, j1, j2 = codes[0]
codes[0] = tag, max(i1, i2-n), i2, max(j1, j2-n), j2
if codes[-1][0] == 'equal':
tag, i1, i2, j1, j2 = codes[-1]
codes[-1] = tag, i1, min(i2, i1+n), j1, min(j2, j1+n)
nn = n + n
group = []
for tag, i1, i2, j1, j2 in codes:
# End the current group and start a new one whenever
# there is a large range with no changes.
if tag == 'equal' and i2-i1 > nn:
group.append((tag, i1, min(i2, i1+n), j1, min(j2, j1+n)))
yield group
group = []
i1, j1 = max(i1, i2-n), max(j1, j2-n)
group.append((tag, i1, i2, j1 ,j2))
if group and not (len(group)==1 and group[0][0] == 'equal'):
yield group
def ratio(self):
"""Return a measure of the sequences' similarity (float in [0,1]).
Where T is the total number of elements in both sequences, and
M is the number of matches, this is 2.0*M / T.
Note that this is 1 if the sequences are identical, and 0 if
they have nothing in common.
.ratio() is expensive to compute if you haven't already computed
.get_matching_blocks() or .get_opcodes(), in which case you may
want to try .quick_ratio() or .real_quick_ratio() first to get an
upper bound.
>>> s = SequenceMatcher(None, "abcd", "bcde")
>>> s.ratio()
0.75
>>> s.quick_ratio()
0.75
>>> s.real_quick_ratio()
1.0
"""
matches = sum(triple[-1] for triple in self.get_matching_blocks())
return _calculate_ratio(matches, len(self.a) + len(self.b))
def quick_ratio(self):
"""Return an upper bound on ratio() relatively quickly.
This isn't defined beyond that it is an upper bound on .ratio(), and
is faster to compute.
"""
# viewing a and b as multisets, set matches to the cardinality
# of their intersection; this counts the number of matches
# without regard to order, so is clearly an upper bound
if self.fullbcount is None:
self.fullbcount = fullbcount = {}
for elt in self.b:
fullbcount[elt] = fullbcount.get(elt, 0) + 1
fullbcount = self.fullbcount
# avail[x] is the number of times x appears in 'b' less the
# number of times we've seen it in 'a' so far ... kinda
avail = {}
availhas, matches = avail.__contains__, 0
for elt in self.a:
if availhas(elt):
numb = avail[elt]
else:
numb = fullbcount.get(elt, 0)
avail[elt] = numb - 1
if numb > 0:
matches = matches + 1
return _calculate_ratio(matches, len(self.a) + len(self.b))
def real_quick_ratio(self):
"""Return an upper bound on ratio() very quickly.
This isn't defined beyond that it is an upper bound on .ratio(), and
is faster to compute than either .ratio() or .quick_ratio().
"""
la, lb = len(self.a), len(self.b)
# can't have more matches than the number of elements in the
# shorter sequence
return _calculate_ratio(min(la, lb), la + lb)
def get_close_matches(word, possibilities, n=3, cutoff=0.6):
"""Use SequenceMatcher to return list of the best "good enough" matches.
word is a sequence for which close matches are desired (typically a
string).
possibilities is a list of sequences against which to match word
(typically a list of strings).
Optional arg n (default 3) is the maximum number of close matches to
return. n must be > 0.
Optional arg cutoff (default 0.6) is a float in [0, 1]. Possibilities
that don't score at least that similar to word are ignored.
The best (no more than n) matches among the possibilities are returned
in a list, sorted by similarity score, most similar first.
>>> get_close_matches("appel", ["ape", "apple", "peach", "puppy"])
['apple', 'ape']
>>> import keyword as _keyword
>>> get_close_matches("wheel", _keyword.kwlist)
['while']
>>> get_close_matches("apple", _keyword.kwlist)
[]
>>> get_close_matches("accept", _keyword.kwlist)
['except']
"""
if not n > 0:
raise ValueError("n must be > 0: %r" % (n,))
if not 0.0 <= cutoff <= 1.0:
raise ValueError("cutoff must be in [0.0, 1.0]: %r" % (cutoff,))
result = []
s = SequenceMatcher()
s.set_seq2(word)
for x in possibilities:
s.set_seq1(x)
if s.real_quick_ratio() >= cutoff and \
s.quick_ratio() >= cutoff and \
s.ratio() >= cutoff:
result.append((s.ratio(), x))
# Move the best scorers to head of list
result = heapq.nlargest(n, result)
# Strip scores for the best n matches
return [x for score, x in result]
def _count_leading(line, ch):
"""
Return number of `ch` characters at the start of `line`.
Example:
>>> _count_leading(' abc', ' ')
3
"""
i, n = 0, len(line)
while i < n and line[i] == ch:
i += 1
return i
class Differ:
r"""
Differ is a class for comparing sequences of lines of text, and
producing human-readable differences or deltas. Differ uses
SequenceMatcher both to compare sequences of lines, and to compare
sequences of characters within similar (near-matching) lines.
Each line of a Differ delta begins with a two-letter code:
'- ' line unique to sequence 1
'+ ' line unique to sequence 2
' ' line common to both sequences
'? ' line not present in either input sequence
Lines beginning with '? ' attempt to guide the eye to intraline
differences, and were not present in either input sequence. These lines
can be confusing if the sequences contain tab characters.
Note that Differ makes no claim to produce a *minimal* diff. To the
contrary, minimal diffs are often counter-intuitive, because they synch
up anywhere possible, sometimes accidental matches 100 pages apart.
Restricting synch points to contiguous matches preserves some notion of
locality, at the occasional cost of producing a longer diff.
Example: Comparing two texts.
First we set up the texts, sequences of individual single-line strings
ending with newlines (such sequences can also be obtained from the
`readlines()` method of file-like objects):
>>> text1 = ''' 1. Beautiful is better than ugly.
... 2. Explicit is better than implicit.
... 3. Simple is better than complex.
... 4. Complex is better than complicated.
... '''.splitlines(1)
>>> len(text1)
4
>>> text1[0][-1]
'\n'
>>> text2 = ''' 1. Beautiful is better than ugly.
... 3. Simple is better than complex.
... 4. Complicated is better than complex.
... 5. Flat is better than nested.
... '''.splitlines(1)
Next we instantiate a Differ object:
>>> d = Differ()
Note that when instantiating a Differ object we may pass functions to
filter out line and character 'junk'. See Differ.__init__ for details.
Finally, we compare the two:
>>> result = list(d.compare(text1, text2))
'result' is a list of strings, so let's pretty-print it:
>>> from pprint import pprint as _pprint
>>> _pprint(result)
[' 1. Beautiful is better than ugly.\n',
'- 2. Explicit is better than implicit.\n',
'- 3. Simple is better than complex.\n',
'+ 3. Simple is better than complex.\n',
'? ++\n',
'- 4. Complex is better than complicated.\n',
'? ^ ---- ^\n',
'+ 4. Complicated is better than complex.\n',
'? ++++ ^ ^\n',
'+ 5. Flat is better than nested.\n']
As a single multi-line string it looks like this:
>>> print(''.join(result), end="")
1. Beautiful is better than ugly.
- 2. Explicit is better than implicit.
- 3. Simple is better than complex.
+ 3. Simple is better than complex.
? ++
- 4. Complex is better than complicated.
? ^ ---- ^
+ 4. Complicated is better than complex.
? ++++ ^ ^
+ 5. Flat is better than nested.
Methods:
__init__(linejunk=None, charjunk=None)
Construct a text differencer, with optional filters.
compare(a, b)
Compare two sequences of lines; generate the resulting delta.
"""
def __init__(self, linejunk=None, charjunk=None):
"""
Construct a text differencer, with optional filters.
The two optional keyword parameters are for filter functions:
- `linejunk`: A function that should accept a single string argument,
and return true iff the string is junk. The module-level function
`IS_LINE_JUNK` may be used to filter out lines without visible
characters, except for at most one splat ('#'). It is recommended
to leave linejunk None; as of Python 2.3, the underlying
SequenceMatcher class has grown an adaptive notion of "noise" lines
that's better than any static definition the author has ever been
able to craft.
- `charjunk`: A function that should accept a string of length 1. The
module-level function `IS_CHARACTER_JUNK` may be used to filter out
whitespace characters (a blank or tab; **note**: bad idea to include
newline in this!). Use of IS_CHARACTER_JUNK is recommended.
"""
self.linejunk = linejunk
self.charjunk = charjunk
def compare(self, a, b):
r"""
Compare two sequences of lines; generate the resulting delta.
Each sequence must contain individual single-line strings ending with
newlines. Such sequences can be obtained from the `readlines()` method
of file-like objects. The delta generated also consists of newline-
terminated strings, ready to be printed as-is via the writeline()
method of a file-like object.
Example:
>>> print(''.join(Differ().compare('one\ntwo\nthree\n'.splitlines(1),
... 'ore\ntree\nemu\n'.splitlines(1))),
... end="")
- one
? ^
+ ore
? ^
- two
- three
? -
+ tree
+ emu
"""
cruncher = SequenceMatcher(self.linejunk, a, b)
for tag, alo, ahi, blo, bhi in cruncher.get_opcodes():
if tag == 'replace':
g = self._fancy_replace(a, alo, ahi, b, blo, bhi)
elif tag == 'delete':
g = self._dump('-', a, alo, ahi)
elif tag == 'insert':
g = self._dump('+', b, blo, bhi)
elif tag == 'equal':
g = self._dump(' ', a, alo, ahi)
else:
raise ValueError, 'unknown tag %r' % (tag,)
for line in g:
yield line
def _dump(self, tag, x, lo, hi):
"""Generate comparison results for a same-tagged range."""
for i in xrange(lo, hi):
yield '%s %s' % (tag, x[i])
def _plain_replace(self, a, alo, ahi, b, blo, bhi):
assert alo < ahi and blo < bhi
# dump the shorter block first -- reduces the burden on short-term
# memory if the blocks are of very different sizes
if bhi - blo < ahi - alo:
first = self._dump('+', b, blo, bhi)
second = self._dump('-', a, alo, ahi)
else:
first = self._dump('-', a, alo, ahi)
second = self._dump('+', b, blo, bhi)
for g in first, second:
for line in g:
yield line
def _fancy_replace(self, a, alo, ahi, b, blo, bhi):
r"""
When replacing one block of lines with another, search the blocks
for *similar* lines; the best-matching pair (if any) is used as a
synch point, and intraline difference marking is done on the
similar pair. Lots of work, but often worth it.
Example:
>>> d = Differ()
>>> results = d._fancy_replace(['abcDefghiJkl\n'], 0, 1,
... ['abcdefGhijkl\n'], 0, 1)
>>> print(''.join(results), end="")
- abcDefghiJkl
? ^ ^ ^
+ abcdefGhijkl
? ^ ^ ^
"""
# don't synch up unless the lines have a similarity score of at
# least cutoff; best_ratio tracks the best score seen so far
best_ratio, cutoff = 0.74, 0.75
cruncher = SequenceMatcher(self.charjunk)
eqi, eqj = None, None # 1st indices of equal lines (if any)
# search for the pair that matches best without being identical
# (identical lines must be junk lines, & we don't want to synch up
# on junk -- unless we have to)
for j in xrange(blo, bhi):
bj = b[j]
cruncher.set_seq2(bj)
for i in xrange(alo, ahi):
ai = a[i]
if ai == bj:
if eqi is None:
eqi, eqj = i, j
continue
cruncher.set_seq1(ai)
# computing similarity is expensive, so use the quick
# upper bounds first -- have seen this speed up messy
# compares by a factor of 3.
# note that ratio() is only expensive to compute the first
# time it's called on a sequence pair; the expensive part
# of the computation is cached by cruncher
if cruncher.real_quick_ratio() > best_ratio and \
cruncher.quick_ratio() > best_ratio and \
cruncher.ratio() > best_ratio:
best_ratio, best_i, best_j = cruncher.ratio(), i, j
if best_ratio < cutoff:
# no non-identical "pretty close" pair
if eqi is None:
# no identical pair either -- treat it as a straight replace
for line in self._plain_replace(a, alo, ahi, b, blo, bhi):
yield line
return
# no close pair, but an identical pair -- synch up on that
best_i, best_j, best_ratio = eqi, eqj, 1.0
else:
# there's a close pair, so forget the identical pair (if any)
eqi = None
# a[best_i] very similar to b[best_j]; eqi is None iff they're not
# identical
# pump out diffs from before the synch point
for line in self._fancy_helper(a, alo, best_i, b, blo, best_j):
yield line
# do intraline marking on the synch pair
aelt, belt = a[best_i], b[best_j]
if eqi is None:
# pump out a '-', '?', '+', '?' quad for the synched lines
atags = btags = ""
cruncher.set_seqs(aelt, belt)
for tag, ai1, ai2, bj1, bj2 in cruncher.get_opcodes():
la, lb = ai2 - ai1, bj2 - bj1
if tag == 'replace':
atags += '^' * la
btags += '^' * lb
elif tag == 'delete':
atags += '-' * la
elif tag == 'insert':
btags += '+' * lb
elif tag == 'equal':
atags += ' ' * la
btags += ' ' * lb
else:
raise ValueError, 'unknown tag %r' % (tag,)
for line in self._qformat(aelt, belt, atags, btags):
yield line
else:
# the synch pair is identical
yield ' ' + aelt
# pump out diffs from after the synch point
for line in self._fancy_helper(a, best_i+1, ahi, b, best_j+1, bhi):
yield line
def _fancy_helper(self, a, alo, ahi, b, blo, bhi):
g = []
if alo < ahi:
if blo < bhi:
g = self._fancy_replace(a, alo, ahi, b, blo, bhi)
else:
g = self._dump('-', a, alo, ahi)
elif blo < bhi:
g = self._dump('+', b, blo, bhi)
for line in g:
yield line
def _qformat(self, aline, bline, atags, btags):
r"""
Format "?" output and deal with leading tabs.
Example:
>>> d = Differ()
>>> results = d._qformat('\tabcDefghiJkl\n', '\t\tabcdefGhijkl\n',
... ' ^ ^ ^ ', '+ ^ ^ ^ ')
>>> for line in results: print(repr(line))
...
'- \tabcDefghiJkl\n'
'? \t ^ ^ ^\n'
'+ \t\tabcdefGhijkl\n'
'? \t ^ ^ ^\n'
"""
# Can hurt, but will probably help most of the time.
common = min(_count_leading(aline, "\t"),
_count_leading(bline, "\t"))
common = min(common, _count_leading(atags[:common], " "))
atags = atags[common:].rstrip()
btags = btags[common:].rstrip()
yield "- " + aline
if atags:
yield "? %s%s\n" % ("\t" * common, atags)
yield "+ " + bline
if btags:
yield "? %s%s\n" % ("\t" * common, btags)
# With respect to junk, an earlier version of ndiff simply refused to
# *start* a match with a junk element. The result was cases like this:
# before: private Thread currentThread;
# after: private volatile Thread currentThread;
# If you consider whitespace to be junk, the longest contiguous match
# not starting with junk is "e Thread currentThread". So ndiff reported
# that "e volatil" was inserted between the 't' and the 'e' in "private".
# While an accurate view, to people that's absurd. The current version
# looks for matching blocks that are entirely junk-free, then extends the
# longest one of those as far as possible but only with matching junk.
# So now "currentThread" is matched, then extended to suck up the
# preceding blank; then "private" is matched, and extended to suck up the
# following blank; then "Thread" is matched; and finally ndiff reports
# that "volatile " was inserted before "Thread". The only quibble
# remaining is that perhaps it was really the case that " volatile"
# was inserted after "private". I can live with that <wink>.
import re
def IS_LINE_JUNK(line, pat=re.compile(r"\s*#?\s*$").match):
r"""
Return 1 for ignorable line: iff `line` is blank or contains a single '#'.
Examples:
>>> IS_LINE_JUNK('\n')
True
>>> IS_LINE_JUNK(' # \n')
True
>>> IS_LINE_JUNK('hello\n')
False
"""
return pat(line) is not None
def IS_CHARACTER_JUNK(ch, ws=" \t"):
r"""
Return 1 for ignorable character: iff `ch` is a space or tab.
Examples:
>>> IS_CHARACTER_JUNK(' ')
True
>>> IS_CHARACTER_JUNK('\t')
True
>>> IS_CHARACTER_JUNK('\n')
False
>>> IS_CHARACTER_JUNK('x')
False
"""
return ch in ws
def unified_diff(a, b, fromfile='', tofile='', fromfiledate='',
tofiledate='', n=3, lineterm='\n'):
r"""
Compare two sequences of lines; generate the delta as a unified diff.
Unified diffs are a compact way of showing line changes and a few
lines of context. The number of context lines is set by 'n' which
defaults to three.
By default, the diff control lines (those with ---, +++, or @@) are
created with a trailing newline. This is helpful so that inputs
created from file.readlines() result in diffs that are suitable for
file.writelines() since both the inputs and outputs have trailing
newlines.
For inputs that do not have trailing newlines, set the lineterm
argument to "" so that the output will be uniformly newline free.
The unidiff format normally has a header for filenames and modification
times. Any or all of these may be specified using strings for
'fromfile', 'tofile', 'fromfiledate', and 'tofiledate'. The modification
times are normally expressed in the format returned by time.ctime().
Example:
>>> for line in unified_diff('one two three four'.split(),
... 'zero one tree four'.split(), 'Original', 'Current',
... 'Sat Jan 26 23:30:50 1991', 'Fri Jun 06 10:20:52 2003',
... lineterm=''):
... print(line)
--- Original Sat Jan 26 23:30:50 1991
+++ Current Fri Jun 06 10:20:52 2003
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
+zero
one
-two
-three
+tree
four
"""
started = False
for group in SequenceMatcher(None,a,b).get_grouped_opcodes(n):
if not started:
yield '--- %s %s%s' % (fromfile, fromfiledate, lineterm)
yield '+++ %s %s%s' % (tofile, tofiledate, lineterm)
started = True
i1, i2, j1, j2 = group[0][1], group[-1][2], group[0][3], group[-1][4]
yield "@@ -%d,%d +%d,%d @@%s" % (i1+1, i2-i1, j1+1, j2-j1, lineterm)
for tag, i1, i2, j1, j2 in group:
if tag == 'equal':
for line in a[i1:i2]:
yield ' ' + line
continue
if tag == 'replace' or tag == 'delete':
for line in a[i1:i2]:
yield '-' + line
if tag == 'replace' or tag == 'insert':
for line in b[j1:j2]:
yield '+' + line
# See http://www.unix.org/single_unix_specification/
def context_diff(a, b, fromfile='', tofile='',
fromfiledate='', tofiledate='', n=3, lineterm='\n'):
r"""
Compare two sequences of lines; generate the delta as a context diff.
Context diffs are a compact way of showing line changes and a few
lines of context. The number of context lines is set by 'n' which
defaults to three.
By default, the diff control lines (those with *** or ---) are
created with a trailing newline. This is helpful so that inputs
created from file.readlines() result in diffs that are suitable for
file.writelines() since both the inputs and outputs have trailing
newlines.
For inputs that do not have trailing newlines, set the lineterm
argument to "" so that the output will be uniformly newline free.
The context diff format normally has a header for filenames and
modification times. Any or all of these may be specified using
strings for 'fromfile', 'tofile', 'fromfiledate', and 'tofiledate'.
The modification times are normally expressed in the format returned
by time.ctime(). If not specified, the strings default to blanks.
Example:
>>> print(''.join(context_diff('one\ntwo\nthree\nfour\n'.splitlines(1),
... 'zero\none\ntree\nfour\n'.splitlines(1), 'Original', 'Current',
... 'Sat Jan 26 23:30:50 1991', 'Fri Jun 06 10:22:46 2003')),
... end="")
*** Original Sat Jan 26 23:30:50 1991
--- Current Fri Jun 06 10:22:46 2003
***************
*** 1,4 ****
one
! two
! three
four
--- 1,4 ----
+ zero
one
! tree
four
"""
started = False
prefixmap = {'insert':'+ ', 'delete':'- ', 'replace':'! ', 'equal':' '}
for group in SequenceMatcher(None,a,b).get_grouped_opcodes(n):
if not started:
yield '*** %s %s%s' % (fromfile, fromfiledate, lineterm)
yield '--- %s %s%s' % (tofile, tofiledate, lineterm)
started = True
yield '***************%s' % (lineterm,)
if group[-1][2] - group[0][1] >= 2:
yield '*** %d,%d ****%s' % (group[0][1]+1, group[-1][2], lineterm)
else:
yield '*** %d ****%s' % (group[-1][2], lineterm)
visiblechanges = [e for e in group if e[0] in ('replace', 'delete')]
if visiblechanges:
for tag, i1, i2, _, _ in group:
if tag != 'insert':
for line in a[i1:i2]:
yield prefixmap[tag] + line
if group[-1][4] - group[0][3] >= 2:
yield '--- %d,%d ----%s' % (group[0][3]+1, group[-1][4], lineterm)
else:
yield '--- %d ----%s' % (group[-1][4], lineterm)
visiblechanges = [e for e in group if e[0] in ('replace', 'insert')]
if visiblechanges:
for tag, _, _, j1, j2 in group:
if tag != 'delete':
for line in b[j1:j2]:
yield prefixmap[tag] + line
def ndiff(a, b, linejunk=None, charjunk=IS_CHARACTER_JUNK):
r"""
Compare `a` and `b` (lists of strings); return a `Differ`-style delta.
Optional keyword parameters `linejunk` and `charjunk` are for filter
functions (or None):
- linejunk: A function that should accept a single string argument, and
return true iff the string is junk. The default is None, and is
recommended; as of Python 2.3, an adaptive notion of "noise" lines is
used that does a good job on its own.
- charjunk: A function that should accept a string of length 1. The
default is module-level function IS_CHARACTER_JUNK, which filters out
whitespace characters (a blank or tab; note: bad idea to include newline
in this!).
Tools/scripts/ndiff.py is a command-line front-end to this function.
Example:
>>> diff = ndiff('one\ntwo\nthree\n'.splitlines(1),
... 'ore\ntree\nemu\n'.splitlines(1))
>>> print(''.join(diff), end="")
- one
? ^
+ ore
? ^
- two
- three
? -
+ tree
+ emu
"""
return Differ(linejunk, charjunk).compare(a, b)
def _mdiff(fromlines, tolines, context=None, linejunk=None,
charjunk=IS_CHARACTER_JUNK):
r"""Returns generator yielding marked up from/to side by side differences.
Arguments:
fromlines -- list of text lines to compared to tolines
tolines -- list of text lines to be compared to fromlines
context -- number of context lines to display on each side of difference,
if None, all from/to text lines will be generated.
linejunk -- passed on to ndiff (see ndiff documentation)
charjunk -- passed on to ndiff (see ndiff documentation)
This function returns an interator which returns a tuple:
(from line tuple, to line tuple, boolean flag)
from/to line tuple -- (line num, line text)
line num -- integer or None (to indicate a context seperation)
line text -- original line text with following markers inserted:
'\0+' -- marks start of added text
'\0-' -- marks start of deleted text
'\0^' -- marks start of changed text
'\1' -- marks end of added/deleted/changed text
boolean flag -- None indicates context separation, True indicates
either "from" or "to" line contains a change, otherwise False.
This function/iterator was originally developed to generate side by side
file difference for making HTML pages (see HtmlDiff class for example
usage).
Note, this function utilizes the ndiff function to generate the side by
side difference markup. Optional ndiff arguments may be passed to this
function and they in turn will be passed to ndiff.
"""
import re
# regular expression for finding intraline change indices
change_re = re.compile('(\++|\-+|\^+)')
# create the difference iterator to generate the differences
diff_lines_iterator = ndiff(fromlines,tolines,linejunk,charjunk)
def _make_line(lines, format_key, side, num_lines=[0,0]):
"""Returns line of text with user's change markup and line formatting.
lines -- list of lines from the ndiff generator to produce a line of
text from. When producing the line of text to return, the
lines used are removed from this list.
format_key -- '+' return first line in list with "add" markup around
the entire line.
'-' return first line in list with "delete" markup around
the entire line.
'?' return first line in list with add/delete/change
intraline markup (indices obtained from second line)
None return first line in list with no markup
side -- indice into the num_lines list (0=from,1=to)
num_lines -- from/to current line number. This is NOT intended to be a
passed parameter. It is present as a keyword argument to
maintain memory of the current line numbers between calls
of this function.
Note, this function is purposefully not defined at the module scope so
that data it needs from its parent function (within whose context it
is defined) does not need to be of module scope.
"""
num_lines[side] += 1
# Handle case where no user markup is to be added, just return line of
# text with user's line format to allow for usage of the line number.
if format_key is None:
return (num_lines[side],lines.pop(0)[2:])
# Handle case of intraline changes
if format_key == '?':
text, markers = lines.pop(0), lines.pop(0)
# find intraline changes (store change type and indices in tuples)
sub_info = []
def record_sub_info(match_object,sub_info=sub_info):
sub_info.append([match_object.group(1)[0],match_object.span()])
return match_object.group(1)
change_re.sub(record_sub_info,markers)
# process each tuple inserting our special marks that won't be
# noticed by an xml/html escaper.
for key,(begin,end) in sub_info[::-1]:
text = text[0:begin]+'\0'+key+text[begin:end]+'\1'+text[end:]
text = text[2:]
# Handle case of add/delete entire line
else:
text = lines.pop(0)[2:]
# if line of text is just a newline, insert a space so there is
# something for the user to highlight and see.
if not text:
text = ' '
# insert marks that won't be noticed by an xml/html escaper.
text = '\0' + format_key + text + '\1'
# Return line of text, first allow user's line formatter to do its
# thing (such as adding the line number) then replace the special
# marks with what the user's change markup.
return (num_lines[side],text)
def _line_iterator():
"""Yields from/to lines of text with a change indication.
This function is an iterator. It itself pulls lines from a
differencing iterator, processes them and yields them. When it can
it yields both a "from" and a "to" line, otherwise it will yield one
or the other. In addition to yielding the lines of from/to text, a
boolean flag is yielded to indicate if the text line(s) have
differences in them.
Note, this function is purposefully not defined at the module scope so
that data it needs from its parent function (within whose context it
is defined) does not need to be of module scope.
"""
lines = []
num_blanks_pending, num_blanks_to_yield = 0, 0
while True:
# Load up next 4 lines so we can look ahead, create strings which
# are a concatenation of the first character of each of the 4 lines
# so we can do some very readable comparisons.
while len(lines) < 4:
try:
lines.append(next(diff_lines_iterator))
except StopIteration:
lines.append('X')
s = ''.join([line[0] for line in lines])
if s.startswith('X'):
# When no more lines, pump out any remaining blank lines so the
# corresponding add/delete lines get a matching blank line so
# all line pairs get yielded at the next level.
num_blanks_to_yield = num_blanks_pending
elif s.startswith('-?+?'):
# simple intraline change
yield _make_line(lines,'?',0), _make_line(lines,'?',1), True
continue
elif s.startswith('--++'):
# in delete block, add block coming: we do NOT want to get
# caught up on blank lines yet, just process the delete line
num_blanks_pending -= 1
yield _make_line(lines,'-',0), None, True
continue
elif s.startswith(('--?+', '--+', '- ')):
# in delete block and see a intraline change or unchanged line
# coming: yield the delete line and then blanks
from_line,to_line = _make_line(lines,'-',0), None
num_blanks_to_yield,num_blanks_pending = num_blanks_pending-1,0
elif s.startswith('-+?'):
# intraline change
yield _make_line(lines,None,0), _make_line(lines,'?',1), True
continue
elif s.startswith('-?+'):
# intraline change
yield _make_line(lines,'?',0), _make_line(lines,None,1), True
continue
elif s.startswith('-'):
# delete FROM line
num_blanks_pending -= 1
yield _make_line(lines,'-',0), None, True
continue
elif s.startswith('+--'):
# in add block, delete block coming: we do NOT want to get
# caught up on blank lines yet, just process the add line
num_blanks_pending += 1
yield None, _make_line(lines,'+',1), True
continue
elif s.startswith(('+ ', '+-')):
# will be leaving an add block: yield blanks then add line
from_line, to_line = None, _make_line(lines,'+',1)
num_blanks_to_yield,num_blanks_pending = num_blanks_pending+1,0
elif s.startswith('+'):
# inside an add block, yield the add line
num_blanks_pending += 1
yield None, _make_line(lines,'+',1), True
continue
elif s.startswith(' '):
# unchanged text, yield it to both sides
yield _make_line(lines[:],None,0),_make_line(lines,None,1),False
continue
# Catch up on the blank lines so when we yield the next from/to
# pair, they are lined up.
while(num_blanks_to_yield < 0):
num_blanks_to_yield += 1
yield None,('','\n'),True
while(num_blanks_to_yield > 0):
num_blanks_to_yield -= 1
yield ('','\n'),None,True
if s.startswith('X'):
raise StopIteration
else:
yield from_line,to_line,True
def _line_pair_iterator():
"""Yields from/to lines of text with a change indication.
This function is an iterator. It itself pulls lines from the line
iterator. Its difference from that iterator is that this function
always yields a pair of from/to text lines (with the change
indication). If necessary it will collect single from/to lines
until it has a matching pair from/to pair to yield.
Note, this function is purposefully not defined at the module scope so
that data it needs from its parent function (within whose context it
is defined) does not need to be of module scope.
"""
line_iterator = _line_iterator()
fromlines,tolines=[],[]
while True:
# Collecting lines of text until we have a from/to pair
while (len(fromlines)==0 or len(tolines)==0):
from_line, to_line, found_diff = next(line_iterator)
if from_line is not None:
fromlines.append((from_line,found_diff))
if to_line is not None:
tolines.append((to_line,found_diff))
# Once we have a pair, remove them from the collection and yield it
from_line, fromDiff = fromlines.pop(0)
to_line, to_diff = tolines.pop(0)
yield (from_line,to_line,fromDiff or to_diff)
# Handle case where user does not want context differencing, just yield
# them up without doing anything else with them.
line_pair_iterator = _line_pair_iterator()
if context is None:
while True:
yield next(line_pair_iterator)
# Handle case where user wants context differencing. We must do some
# storage of lines until we know for sure that they are to be yielded.
else:
context += 1
lines_to_write = 0
while True:
# Store lines up until we find a difference, note use of a
# circular queue because we only need to keep around what
# we need for context.
index, contextLines = 0, [None]*(context)
found_diff = False
while(found_diff is False):
from_line, to_line, found_diff = next(line_pair_iterator)
i = index % context
contextLines[i] = (from_line, to_line, found_diff)
index += 1
# Yield lines that we have collected so far, but first yield
# the user's separator.
if index > context:
yield None, None, None
lines_to_write = context
else:
lines_to_write = index
index = 0
while(lines_to_write):
i = index % context
index += 1
yield contextLines[i]
lines_to_write -= 1
# Now yield the context lines after the change
lines_to_write = context-1
while(lines_to_write):
from_line, to_line, found_diff = next(line_pair_iterator)
# If another change within the context, extend the context
if found_diff:
lines_to_write = context-1
else:
lines_to_write -= 1
yield from_line, to_line, found_diff
_file_template = """
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN"
"http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd">
<html>
<head>
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type"
content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1" />
<title></title>
<style type="text/css">%(styles)s
</style>
</head>
<body>
%(table)s%(legend)s
</body>
</html>"""
_styles = """
table.diff {font-family:Courier; border:medium;}
.diff_header {background-color:#e0e0e0}
td.diff_header {text-align:right}
.diff_next {background-color:#c0c0c0}
.diff_add {background-color:#aaffaa}
.diff_chg {background-color:#ffff77}
.diff_sub {background-color:#ffaaaa}"""
_table_template = """
<table class="diff" id="difflib_chg_%(prefix)s_top"
cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" rules="groups" >
<colgroup></colgroup> <colgroup></colgroup> <colgroup></colgroup>
<colgroup></colgroup> <colgroup></colgroup> <colgroup></colgroup>
%(header_row)s
<tbody>
%(data_rows)s </tbody>
</table>"""
_legend = """
<table class="diff" summary="Legends">
<tr> <th colspan="2"> Legends </th> </tr>
<tr> <td> <table border="" summary="Colors">
<tr><th> Colors </th> </tr>
<tr><td class="diff_add">&nbsp;Added&nbsp;</td></tr>
<tr><td class="diff_chg">Changed</td> </tr>
<tr><td class="diff_sub">Deleted</td> </tr>
</table></td>
<td> <table border="" summary="Links">
<tr><th colspan="2"> Links </th> </tr>
<tr><td>(f)irst change</td> </tr>
<tr><td>(n)ext change</td> </tr>
<tr><td>(t)op</td> </tr>
</table></td> </tr>
</table>"""
class HtmlDiff(object):
"""For producing HTML side by side comparison with change highlights.
This class can be used to create an HTML table (or a complete HTML file
containing the table) showing a side by side, line by line comparison
of text with inter-line and intra-line change highlights. The table can
be generated in either full or contextual difference mode.
The following methods are provided for HTML generation:
make_table -- generates HTML for a single side by side table
make_file -- generates complete HTML file with a single side by side table
See tools/scripts/diff.py for an example usage of this class.
"""
_file_template = _file_template
_styles = _styles
_table_template = _table_template
_legend = _legend
_default_prefix = 0
def __init__(self,tabsize=8,wrapcolumn=None,linejunk=None,
charjunk=IS_CHARACTER_JUNK):
"""HtmlDiff instance initializer
Arguments:
tabsize -- tab stop spacing, defaults to 8.
wrapcolumn -- column number where lines are broken and wrapped,
defaults to None where lines are not wrapped.
linejunk,charjunk -- keyword arguments passed into ndiff() (used to by
HtmlDiff() to generate the side by side HTML differences). See
ndiff() documentation for argument default values and descriptions.
"""
self._tabsize = tabsize
self._wrapcolumn = wrapcolumn
self._linejunk = linejunk
self._charjunk = charjunk
def make_file(self,fromlines,tolines,fromdesc='',todesc='',context=False,
numlines=5):
"""Returns HTML file of side by side comparison with change highlights
Arguments:
fromlines -- list of "from" lines
tolines -- list of "to" lines
fromdesc -- "from" file column header string
todesc -- "to" file column header string
context -- set to True for contextual differences (defaults to False
which shows full differences).
numlines -- number of context lines. When context is set True,
controls number of lines displayed before and after the change.
When context is False, controls the number of lines to place
the "next" link anchors before the next change (so click of
"next" link jumps to just before the change).
"""
return self._file_template % dict(
styles = self._styles,
legend = self._legend,
table = self.make_table(fromlines,tolines,fromdesc,todesc,
context=context,numlines=numlines))
def _tab_newline_replace(self,fromlines,tolines):
"""Returns from/to line lists with tabs expanded and newlines removed.
Instead of tab characters being replaced by the number of spaces
needed to fill in to the next tab stop, this function will fill
the space with tab characters. This is done so that the difference
algorithms can identify changes in a file when tabs are replaced by
spaces and vice versa. At the end of the HTML generation, the tab
characters will be replaced with a nonbreakable space.
"""
def expand_tabs(line):
# hide real spaces
line = line.replace(' ','\0')
# expand tabs into spaces
line = line.expandtabs(self._tabsize)
# relace spaces from expanded tabs back into tab characters
# (we'll replace them with markup after we do differencing)
line = line.replace(' ','\t')
return line.replace('\0',' ').rstrip('\n')
fromlines = [expand_tabs(line) for line in fromlines]
tolines = [expand_tabs(line) for line in tolines]
return fromlines,tolines
def _split_line(self,data_list,line_num,text):
"""Builds list of text lines by splitting text lines at wrap point
This function will determine if the input text line needs to be
wrapped (split) into separate lines. If so, the first wrap point
will be determined and the first line appended to the output
text line list. This function is used recursively to handle
the second part of the split line to further split it.
"""
# if blank line or context separator, just add it to the output list
if not line_num:
data_list.append((line_num,text))
return
# if line text doesn't need wrapping, just add it to the output list
size = len(text)
max = self._wrapcolumn
if (size <= max) or ((size -(text.count('\0')*3)) <= max):
data_list.append((line_num,text))
return
# scan text looking for the wrap point, keeping track if the wrap
# point is inside markers
i = 0
n = 0
mark = ''
while n < max and i < size:
if text[i] == '\0':
i += 1
mark = text[i]
i += 1
elif text[i] == '\1':
i += 1
mark = ''
else:
i += 1
n += 1
# wrap point is inside text, break it up into separate lines
line1 = text[:i]
line2 = text[i:]
# if wrap point is inside markers, place end marker at end of first
# line and start marker at beginning of second line because each
# line will have its own table tag markup around it.
if mark:
line1 = line1 + '\1'
line2 = '\0' + mark + line2
# tack on first line onto the output list
data_list.append((line_num,line1))
# use this routine again to wrap the remaining text
self._split_line(data_list,'>',line2)
def _line_wrapper(self,diffs):
"""Returns iterator that splits (wraps) mdiff text lines"""
# pull from/to data and flags from mdiff iterator
for fromdata,todata,flag in diffs:
# check for context separators and pass them through
if flag is None:
yield fromdata,todata,flag
continue
(fromline,fromtext),(toline,totext) = fromdata,todata
# for each from/to line split it at the wrap column to form
# list of text lines.
fromlist,tolist = [],[]
self._split_line(fromlist,fromline,fromtext)
self._split_line(tolist,toline,totext)
# yield from/to line in pairs inserting blank lines as
# necessary when one side has more wrapped lines
while fromlist or tolist:
if fromlist:
fromdata = fromlist.pop(0)
else:
fromdata = ('',' ')
if tolist:
todata = tolist.pop(0)
else:
todata = ('',' ')
yield fromdata,todata,flag
def _collect_lines(self,diffs):
"""Collects mdiff output into separate lists
Before storing the mdiff from/to data into a list, it is converted
into a single line of text with HTML markup.
"""
fromlist,tolist,flaglist = [],[],[]
# pull from/to data and flags from mdiff style iterator
for fromdata,todata,flag in diffs:
try:
# store HTML markup of the lines into the lists
fromlist.append(self._format_line(0,flag,*fromdata))
tolist.append(self._format_line(1,flag,*todata))
except TypeError:
# exceptions occur for lines where context separators go
fromlist.append(None)
tolist.append(None)
flaglist.append(flag)
return fromlist,tolist,flaglist
def _format_line(self,side,flag,linenum,text):
"""Returns HTML markup of "from" / "to" text lines
side -- 0 or 1 indicating "from" or "to" text
flag -- indicates if difference on line
linenum -- line number (used for line number column)
text -- line text to be marked up
"""
try:
linenum = '%d' % linenum
id = ' id="%s%s"' % (self._prefix[side],linenum)
except TypeError:
# handle blank lines where linenum is '>' or ''
id = ''
# replace those things that would get confused with HTML symbols
text=text.replace("&","&amp;").replace(">","&gt;").replace("<","&lt;")
# make space non-breakable so they don't get compressed or line wrapped
text = text.replace(' ','&nbsp;').rstrip()
return '<td class="diff_header"%s>%s</td><td nowrap="nowrap">%s</td>' \
% (id,linenum,text)
def _make_prefix(self):
"""Create unique anchor prefixes"""
# Generate a unique anchor prefix so multiple tables
# can exist on the same HTML page without conflicts.
fromprefix = "from%d_" % HtmlDiff._default_prefix
toprefix = "to%d_" % HtmlDiff._default_prefix
HtmlDiff._default_prefix += 1
# store prefixes so line format method has access
self._prefix = [fromprefix,toprefix]
def _convert_flags(self,fromlist,tolist,flaglist,context,numlines):
"""Makes list of "next" links"""
# all anchor names will be generated using the unique "to" prefix
toprefix = self._prefix[1]
# process change flags, generating middle column of next anchors/links
next_id = ['']*len(flaglist)
next_href = ['']*len(flaglist)
num_chg, in_change = 0, False
last = 0
for i,flag in enumerate(flaglist):
if flag:
if not in_change:
in_change = True
last = i
# at the beginning of a change, drop an anchor a few lines
# (the context lines) before the change for the previous
# link
i = max([0,i-numlines])
next_id[i] = ' id="difflib_chg_%s_%d"' % (toprefix,num_chg)
# at the beginning of a change, drop a link to the next
# change
num_chg += 1
next_href[last] = '<a href="#difflib_chg_%s_%d">n</a>' % (
toprefix,num_chg)
else:
in_change = False
# check for cases where there is no content to avoid exceptions
if not flaglist:
flaglist = [False]
next_id = ['']
next_href = ['']
last = 0
if context:
fromlist = ['<td></td><td>&nbsp;No Differences Found&nbsp;</td>']
tolist = fromlist
else:
fromlist = tolist = ['<td></td><td>&nbsp;Empty File&nbsp;</td>']
# if not a change on first line, drop a link
if not flaglist[0]:
next_href[0] = '<a href="#difflib_chg_%s_0">f</a>' % toprefix
# redo the last link to link to the top
next_href[last] = '<a href="#difflib_chg_%s_top">t</a>' % (toprefix)
return fromlist,tolist,flaglist,next_href,next_id
def make_table(self,fromlines,tolines,fromdesc='',todesc='',context=False,
numlines=5):
"""Returns HTML table of side by side comparison with change highlights
Arguments:
fromlines -- list of "from" lines
tolines -- list of "to" lines
fromdesc -- "from" file column header string
todesc -- "to" file column header string
context -- set to True for contextual differences (defaults to False
which shows full differences).
numlines -- number of context lines. When context is set True,
controls number of lines displayed before and after the change.
When context is False, controls the number of lines to place
the "next" link anchors before the next change (so click of
"next" link jumps to just before the change).
"""
# make unique anchor prefixes so that multiple tables may exist
# on the same page without conflict.
self._make_prefix()
# change tabs to spaces before it gets more difficult after we insert
# markkup
fromlines,tolines = self._tab_newline_replace(fromlines,tolines)
# create diffs iterator which generates side by side from/to data
if context:
context_lines = numlines
else:
context_lines = None
diffs = _mdiff(fromlines,tolines,context_lines,linejunk=self._linejunk,
charjunk=self._charjunk)
# set up iterator to wrap lines that exceed desired width
if self._wrapcolumn:
diffs = self._line_wrapper(diffs)
# collect up from/to lines and flags into lists (also format the lines)
fromlist,tolist,flaglist = self._collect_lines(diffs)
# process change flags, generating middle column of next anchors/links
fromlist,tolist,flaglist,next_href,next_id = self._convert_flags(
fromlist,tolist,flaglist,context,numlines)
s = []
fmt = ' <tr><td class="diff_next"%s>%s</td>%s' + \
'<td class="diff_next">%s</td>%s</tr>\n'
for i in range(len(flaglist)):
if flaglist[i] is None:
# mdiff yields None on separator lines skip the bogus ones
# generated for the first line
if i > 0:
s.append(' </tbody> \n <tbody>\n')
else:
s.append( fmt % (next_id[i],next_href[i],fromlist[i],
next_href[i],tolist[i]))
if fromdesc or todesc:
header_row = '<thead><tr>%s%s%s%s</tr></thead>' % (
'<th class="diff_next"><br /></th>',
'<th colspan="2" class="diff_header">%s</th>' % fromdesc,
'<th class="diff_next"><br /></th>',
'<th colspan="2" class="diff_header">%s</th>' % todesc)
else:
header_row = ''
table = self._table_template % dict(
data_rows=''.join(s),
header_row=header_row,
prefix=self._prefix[1])
return table.replace('\0+','<span class="diff_add">'). \
replace('\0-','<span class="diff_sub">'). \
replace('\0^','<span class="diff_chg">'). \
replace('\1','</span>'). \
replace('\t','&nbsp;')
del re
def restore(delta, which):
r"""
Generate one of the two sequences that generated a delta.
Given a `delta` produced by `Differ.compare()` or `ndiff()`, extract
lines originating from file 1 or 2 (parameter `which`), stripping off line
prefixes.
Examples:
>>> diff = ndiff('one\ntwo\nthree\n'.splitlines(1),
... 'ore\ntree\nemu\n'.splitlines(1))
>>> diff = list(diff)
>>> print(''.join(restore(diff, 1)), end="")
one
two
three
>>> print(''.join(restore(diff, 2)), end="")
ore
tree
emu
"""
try:
tag = {1: "- ", 2: "+ "}[int(which)]
except KeyError:
raise ValueError, ('unknown delta choice (must be 1 or 2): %r'
% which)
prefixes = (" ", tag)
for line in delta:
if line[:2] in prefixes:
yield line[2:]
def _test():
import doctest, difflib
return doctest.testmod(difflib)
if __name__ == "__main__":
_test()