[Python-3000-checkins] r60492 - in python/branches/py3k/Doc: extending/extending.rst howto/functional.rst howto/regex.rst howto/unicode.rst library/array.rst library/collections.rst library/configparser.rst library/csv.rst library/datatypes.rst library/easydialogs.rst library/email.charset.rst library/email.header.rst library/email.util.rst library/fcntl.rst library/fileinput.rst library/functions.rst library/gettext.rst library/imp.rst library/itertools.rst library/logging.rst library/mailbox.rst library/marshal.rst library/operator.rst library/os.path.rst library/os.rst library/pickle.rst library/pkgutil.rst library/re.rst library/simplexmlrpcserver.rst library/sqlite3.rst library/stdtypes.rst library/string.rst library/stringio.rst library/traceback.rst library/undoc.rst library/unicodedata.rst library/userdict.rst library/wsgiref.rst library/xml.dom.minidom.rst library/xml.dom.rst library/xml.etree.elementtree.rst library/xml.sax.handler.rst library/xml.sax.reader.rst library/xmlrpclib.rst reference/datamodel.rst tutorial/classes.rst tutorial/datastructures.rst tutorial/stdlib.rst

georg.brandl python-3000-checkins at python.org
Fri Feb 1 12:56:51 CET 2008


Author: georg.brandl
Date: Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
New Revision: 60492

Modified:
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/extending/extending.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/howto/functional.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/howto/regex.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/howto/unicode.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/array.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/collections.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/configparser.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/csv.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/datatypes.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/easydialogs.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/email.charset.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/email.header.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/email.util.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/fcntl.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/fileinput.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/functions.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/gettext.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/imp.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/itertools.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/logging.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/mailbox.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/marshal.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/operator.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/os.path.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/os.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/pickle.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/pkgutil.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/re.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/simplexmlrpcserver.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/sqlite3.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/stdtypes.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/string.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/stringio.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/traceback.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/undoc.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/unicodedata.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/userdict.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/wsgiref.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/xml.dom.minidom.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/xml.dom.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/xml.etree.elementtree.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/xml.sax.handler.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/xml.sax.reader.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/xmlrpclib.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/reference/datamodel.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/tutorial/classes.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/tutorial/datastructures.rst
   python/branches/py3k/Doc/tutorial/stdlib.rst
Log:
Update docs w.r.t. PEP 3100 changes -- patch for GHOP by Dan Finnie.


Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/extending/extending.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/extending/extending.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/extending/extending.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -826,10 +826,9 @@
 interfaces and the ability to disable the detector at runtime.  The cycle
 detector is considered an optional component; though it is included by default,
 it can be disabled at build time using the :option:`--without-cycle-gc` option
-to the :program:`configure` script on Unix platforms (including Mac OS X) or by
-removing the definition of ``WITH_CYCLE_GC`` in the :file:`pyconfig.h` header on
-other platforms.  If the cycle detector is disabled in this way, the :mod:`gc`
-module will not be available.
+to the :program:`configure` script on Unix platforms (including Mac OS X).  If
+the cycle detector is disabled in this way, the :mod:`gc` module will not be
+available.
 
 
 .. _refcountsinpython:

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/howto/functional.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/howto/functional.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/howto/functional.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -314,7 +314,7 @@
 Sets can take their contents from an iterable and let you iterate over the set's
 elements::
 
-    S = set((2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13))
+    S = {2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13}
     for i in S:
         print(i)
 
@@ -616,29 +616,26 @@
 
 Let's look in more detail at built-in functions often used with iterators.
 
-Two of Python's built-in functions, :func:`map` and :func:`filter`, are somewhat
-obsolete; they duplicate the features of list comprehensions but return actual
-lists instead of iterators.
+Two of Python's built-in functions, :func:`map` and :func:`filter` duplicate the
+features of generator expressions:
 
-``map(f, iterA, iterB, ...)`` returns a list containing ``f(iterA[0], iterB[0]),
-f(iterA[1], iterB[1]), f(iterA[2], iterB[2]), ...``.
+``map(f, iterA, iterB, ...)`` returns an iterator over the sequence 
+ ``f(iterA[0], iterB[0]), f(iterA[1], iterB[1]), f(iterA[2], iterB[2]), ...``.
 
 ::
 
     def upper(s):
         return s.upper()
-    map(upper, ['sentence', 'fragment']) =>
+    list(map(upper, ['sentence', 'fragment'])) =>
       ['SENTENCE', 'FRAGMENT']
 
-    [upper(s) for s in ['sentence', 'fragment']] =>
+    list(upper(s) for s in ['sentence', 'fragment']) =>
       ['SENTENCE', 'FRAGMENT']
 
-As shown above, you can achieve the same effect with a list comprehension.  The
-:func:`itertools.imap` function does the same thing but can handle infinite
-iterators; it'll be discussed later, in the section on the :mod:`itertools` module.
+You can of course achieve the same effect with a list comprehension. 
 
-``filter(predicate, iter)`` returns a list that contains all the sequence
-elements that meet a certain condition, and is similarly duplicated by list
+``filter(predicate, iter)`` returns an iterator over all the sequence elements
+that meet a certain condition, and is similarly duplicated by list
 comprehensions.  A **predicate** is a function that returns the truth value of
 some condition; for use with :func:`filter`, the predicate must take a single
 value.
@@ -648,69 +645,61 @@
     def is_even(x):
         return (x % 2) == 0
 
-    filter(is_even, range(10)) =>
+    list(filter(is_even, range(10))) =>
       [0, 2, 4, 6, 8]
 
-This can also be written as a list comprehension::
+This can also be written as a generator expression::
 
-    >>> [x for x in range(10) if is_even(x)]
+    >>> list(x for x in range(10) if is_even(x))
     [0, 2, 4, 6, 8]
 
-:func:`filter` also has a counterpart in the :mod:`itertools` module,
-:func:`itertools.ifilter`, that returns an iterator and can therefore handle
-infinite sequences just as :func:`itertools.imap` can.
-
-``reduce(func, iter, [initial_value])`` doesn't have a counterpart in the
-:mod:`itertools` module because it cumulatively performs an operation on all the
-iterable's elements and therefore can't be applied to infinite iterables.
-``func`` must be a function that takes two elements and returns a single value.
-:func:`reduce` takes the first two elements A and B returned by the iterator and
-calculates ``func(A, B)``.  It then requests the third element, C, calculates
-``func(func(A, B), C)``, combines this result with the fourth element returned,
-and continues until the iterable is exhausted.  If the iterable returns no
-values at all, a :exc:`TypeError` exception is raised.  If the initial value is
-supplied, it's used as a starting point and ``func(initial_value, A)`` is the
-first calculation.
-
-::
-
-    import operator
-    reduce(operator.concat, ['A', 'BB', 'C']) =>
-      'ABBC'
-    reduce(operator.concat, []) =>
-      TypeError: reduce() of empty sequence with no initial value
-    reduce(operator.mul, [1,2,3], 1) =>
-      6
-    reduce(operator.mul, [], 1) =>
-      1
-
-If you use :func:`operator.add` with :func:`reduce`, you'll add up all the
-elements of the iterable.  This case is so common that there's a special
+``functools.reduce(func, iter, [initial_value])`` cumulatively performs an
+operation on all the iterable's elements and, therefore, can't be applied to
+infinite iterables.  ``func`` must be a function that takes two elements and
+returns a single value.  :func:`functools.reduce` takes the first two elements A
+and B returned by the iterator and calculates ``func(A, B)``.  It then requests
+the third element, C, calculates ``func(func(A, B), C)``, combines this result
+with the fourth element returned, and continues until the iterable is exhausted.
+If the iterable returns no values at all, a :exc:`TypeError` exception is
+raised.  If the initial value is supplied, it's used as a starting point and
+``func(initial_value, A)`` is the first calculation. ::
+
+   import operator
+   import functools
+   functools.reduce(operator.concat, ['A', 'BB', 'C']) =>
+     'ABBC'
+   functools.reduce(operator.concat, []) =>
+     TypeError: reduce() of empty sequence with no initial value
+   functools.reduce(operator.mul, [1,2,3], 1) =>
+     6
+   functools.reduce(operator.mul, [], 1) =>
+     1
+ 
+If you use :func:`operator.add` with :func:`functools.reduce`, you'll add up all
+the elements of the iterable.  This case is so common that there's a special
 built-in called :func:`sum` to compute it::
 
-    reduce(operator.add, [1,2,3,4], 0) =>
-      10
-    sum([1,2,3,4]) =>
-      10
-    sum([]) =>
-      0
+   functools.reduce(operator.add, [1,2,3,4], 0) =>
+     10
+   sum([1,2,3,4]) =>
+     10
+   sum([]) =>
+     0
 
 For many uses of :func:`reduce`, though, it can be clearer to just write the
 obvious :keyword:`for` loop::
 
-    # Instead of:
-    product = reduce(operator.mul, [1,2,3], 1)
+   # Instead of:
+   product = functools.reduce(operator.mul, [1,2,3], 1)
 
-    # You can write:
-    product = 1
-    for i in [1,2,3]:
-        product *= i
+   # You can write:
+   product = 1
+   for i in [1,2,3]:
+       product *= i
 
 
 ``enumerate(iter)`` counts off the elements in the iterable, returning 2-tuples
-containing the count and each element.
-
-::
+containing the count and each element. ::
 
     enumerate(['subject', 'verb', 'object']) =>
       (0, 'subject'), (1, 'verb'), (2, 'object')
@@ -723,12 +712,10 @@
         if line.strip() == '':
             print('Blank line at line #%i' % i)
 
-``sorted(iterable, [cmp=None], [key=None], [reverse=False)`` collects all the
-elements of the iterable into a list, sorts the list, and returns the sorted
-result.  The ``cmp``, ``key``, and ``reverse`` arguments are passed through to
-the constructed list's ``.sort()`` method.
-
-::
+``sorted(iterable, [key=None], [reverse=False)`` collects all the elements of
+the iterable into a list, sorts the list, and returns the sorted result.  The
+``key``, and ``reverse`` arguments are passed through to the constructed list's
+``sort()`` method. ::
 
     import random
     # Generate 8 random numbers between [0, 10000)
@@ -962,14 +949,7 @@
 Calling functions on elements
 -----------------------------
 
-Two functions are used for calling other functions on the contents of an
-iterable.
-
-``itertools.imap(f, iterA, iterB, ...)`` returns a stream containing
-``f(iterA[0], iterB[0]), f(iterA[1], iterB[1]), f(iterA[2], iterB[2]), ...``::
-
-    itertools.imap(operator.add, [5, 6, 5], [1, 2, 3]) =>
-      6, 8, 8
+``itertools.imap(func, iter)`` is the same as built-in :func:`map`.
 
 The ``operator`` module contains a set of functions corresponding to Python's
 operators.  Some examples are ``operator.add(a, b)`` (adds two values),
@@ -992,14 +972,7 @@
 Another group of functions chooses a subset of an iterator's elements based on a
 predicate.
 
-``itertools.ifilter(predicate, iter)`` returns all the elements for which the
-predicate returns true::
-
-    def is_even(x):
-        return (x % 2) == 0
-
-    itertools.ifilter(is_even, itertools.count()) =>
-      0, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, ...
+``itertools.ifilter(predicate, iter)`` is the same as built-in :func:`filter`.
 
 ``itertools.ifilterfalse(predicate, iter)`` is the opposite, returning all
 elements for which the predicate returns false::
@@ -1117,8 +1090,7 @@
 
 Some of the functions in this module are:
 
-* Math operations: ``add()``, ``sub()``, ``mul()``, ``div()``, ``floordiv()``,
-  ``abs()``, ...
+* Math operations: ``add()``, ``sub()``, ``mul()``, ``floordiv()``, ``abs()``, ...
 * Logical operations: ``not_()``, ``truth()``.
 * Bitwise operations: ``and_()``, ``or_()``, ``invert()``.
 * Comparisons: ``eq()``, ``ne()``, ``lt()``, ``le()``, ``gt()``, and ``ge()``.
@@ -1190,7 +1162,7 @@
         f(*g(5, 6))
 
 Even though ``compose()`` only accepts two functions, it's trivial to build up a
-version that will compose any number of functions. We'll use ``reduce()``,
+version that will compose any number of functions. We'll use ``functools.reduce()``,
 ``compose()`` and ``partial()`` (the last of which is provided by both
 ``functional`` and ``functools``).
 
@@ -1198,7 +1170,7 @@
 
         from functional import compose, partial
         
-        multi_compose = partial(reduce, compose)
+        multi_compose = partial(functools.reduce, compose)
         
     
 We can also use ``map()``, ``compose()`` and ``partial()`` to craft a version of

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/howto/regex.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/howto/regex.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/howto/regex.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -497,7 +497,7 @@
 the same ones in several locations, then it might be worthwhile to collect all
 the definitions in one place, in a section of code that compiles all the REs
 ahead of time.  To take an example from the standard library, here's an extract
-from :file:`xmllib.py`::
+from the now deprecated :file:`xmllib.py`::
 
    ref = re.compile( ... )
    entityref = re.compile( ... )

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/howto/unicode.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/howto/unicode.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/howto/unicode.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -237,129 +237,83 @@
 Now that you've learned the rudiments of Unicode, we can look at Python's
 Unicode features.
 
+The String Type
+---------------
 
-The Unicode Type
-----------------
+Since Python 3.0, the language features a ``str`` type that contain Unicode
+characters, meaning any string created using ``"unicode rocks!"``, ``'unicode
+rocks!``, or the triple-quoted string syntax is stored as Unicode.
+
+To insert a Unicode character that is not part ASCII, e.g., any letters with
+accents, one can use escape sequences in their string literals as such::
+
+   >>> "\N{GREEK CAPITAL LETTER DELTA}"  # Using the character name
+   '\u0394'
+   >>> "\u0394"                          # Using a 16-bit hex value
+   '\u0394'
+   >>> "\U00000394"                      # Using a 32-bit hex value
+   '\u0394'
+
+In addition, one can create a string using the :func:`decode` method of
+:class:`bytes`.  This method takes an encoding, such as UTF-8, and, optionally,
+an *errors* argument.
 
-Unicode strings are expressed as instances of the :class:`unicode` type, one of
-Python's repertoire of built-in types.  It derives from an abstract type called
-:class:`basestring`, which is also an ancestor of the :class:`str` type; you can
-therefore check if a value is a string type with ``isinstance(value,
-basestring)``.  Under the hood, Python represents Unicode strings as either 16-
-or 32-bit integers, depending on how the Python interpreter was compiled.
-
-The :func:`unicode` constructor has the signature ``unicode(string[, encoding,
-errors])``.  All of its arguments should be 8-bit strings.  The first argument
-is converted to Unicode using the specified encoding; if you leave off the
-``encoding`` argument, the ASCII encoding is used for the conversion, so
-characters greater than 127 will be treated as errors::
-
-    >>> unicode('abcdef')
-    u'abcdef'
-    >>> s = unicode('abcdef')
-    >>> type(s)
-    <type 'unicode'>
-    >>> unicode('abcdef' + chr(255))
-    Traceback (most recent call last):
-      File "<stdin>", line 1, in ?
-    UnicodeDecodeError: 'ascii' codec can't decode byte 0xff in position 6:
-                        ordinal not in range(128)
-
-The ``errors`` argument specifies the response when the input string can't be
+The *errors* argument specifies the response when the input string can't be
 converted according to the encoding's rules.  Legal values for this argument are
-'strict' (raise a ``UnicodeDecodeError`` exception), 'replace' (add U+FFFD,
+'strict' (raise a :exc:`UnicodeDecodeError` exception), 'replace' (add U+FFFD,
 'REPLACEMENT CHARACTER'), or 'ignore' (just leave the character out of the
 Unicode result).  The following examples show the differences::
 
-    >>> unicode('\x80abc', errors='strict')
+    >>> b'\x80abc'.decode("utf-8", "strict")
     Traceback (most recent call last):
       File "<stdin>", line 1, in ?
     UnicodeDecodeError: 'ascii' codec can't decode byte 0x80 in position 0:
                         ordinal not in range(128)
-    >>> unicode('\x80abc', errors='replace')
-    u'\ufffdabc'
-    >>> unicode('\x80abc', errors='ignore')
-    u'abc'
+    >>> b'\x80abc'.decode("utf-8", "replace")
+    '\ufffdabc'
+    >>> b'\x80abc'.decode("utf-8", "ignore")
+    'abc'
 
-Encodings are specified as strings containing the encoding's name.  Python 2.4
+Encodings are specified as strings containing the encoding's name.  Python
 comes with roughly 100 different encodings; see the Python Library Reference at
 <http://docs.python.org/lib/standard-encodings.html> for a list.  Some encodings
 have multiple names; for example, 'latin-1', 'iso_8859_1' and '8859' are all
 synonyms for the same encoding.
 
-One-character Unicode strings can also be created with the :func:`unichr`
+One-character Unicode strings can also be created with the :func:`chr`
 built-in function, which takes integers and returns a Unicode string of length 1
 that contains the corresponding code point.  The reverse operation is the
 built-in :func:`ord` function that takes a one-character Unicode string and
 returns the code point value::
 
-    >>> unichr(40960)
-    u'\ua000'
-    >>> ord(u'\ua000')
+    >>> chr(40960)
+    '\ua000'
+    >>> ord('\ua000')
     40960
 
-Instances of the :class:`unicode` type have many of the same methods as the
-8-bit string type for operations such as searching and formatting::
+Converting to Bytes
+-------------------
 
-    >>> s = u'Was ever feather so lightly blown to and fro as this multitude?'
-    >>> s.count('e')
-    5
-    >>> s.find('feather')
-    9
-    >>> s.find('bird')
-    -1
-    >>> s.replace('feather', 'sand')
-    u'Was ever sand so lightly blown to and fro as this multitude?'
-    >>> s.upper()
-    u'WAS EVER FEATHER SO LIGHTLY BLOWN TO AND FRO AS THIS MULTITUDE?'
-
-Note that the arguments to these methods can be Unicode strings or 8-bit
-strings.  8-bit strings will be converted to Unicode before carrying out the
-operation; Python's default ASCII encoding will be used, so characters greater
-than 127 will cause an exception::
-
-    >>> s.find('Was\x9f')
-    Traceback (most recent call last):
-      File "<stdin>", line 1, in ?
-    UnicodeDecodeError: 'ascii' codec can't decode byte 0x9f in position 3: ordinal not in range(128)
-    >>> s.find(u'Was\x9f')
-    -1
-
-Much Python code that operates on strings will therefore work with Unicode
-strings without requiring any changes to the code.  (Input and output code needs
-more updating for Unicode; more on this later.)
-
-Another important method is ``.encode([encoding], [errors='strict'])``, which
-returns an 8-bit string version of the Unicode string, encoded in the requested
-encoding.  The ``errors`` parameter is the same as the parameter of the
-``unicode()`` constructor, with one additional possibility; as well as 'strict',
+Another important str method is ``.encode([encoding], [errors='strict'])``,
+which returns a ``bytes`` representation of the Unicode string, encoded in the
+requested encoding.  The ``errors`` parameter is the same as the parameter of
+the :meth:`decode` method, with one additional possibility; as well as 'strict',
 'ignore', and 'replace', you can also pass 'xmlcharrefreplace' which uses XML's
 character references.  The following example shows the different results::
 
-    >>> u = unichr(40960) + u'abcd' + unichr(1972)
+    >>> u = chr(40960) + 'abcd' + chr(1972)
     >>> u.encode('utf-8')
-    '\xea\x80\x80abcd\xde\xb4'
+    b'\xea\x80\x80abcd\xde\xb4'
     >>> u.encode('ascii')
     Traceback (most recent call last):
       File "<stdin>", line 1, in ?
     UnicodeEncodeError: 'ascii' codec can't encode character '\ua000' in position 0: ordinal not in range(128)
     >>> u.encode('ascii', 'ignore')
-    'abcd'
+    b'abcd'
     >>> u.encode('ascii', 'replace')
-    '?abcd?'
+    b'?abcd?'
     >>> u.encode('ascii', 'xmlcharrefreplace')
-    '&#40960;abcd&#1972;'
-
-Python's 8-bit strings have a ``.decode([encoding], [errors])`` method that
-interprets the string using the given encoding::
-
-    >>> u = unichr(40960) + u'abcd' + unichr(1972)   # Assemble a string
-    >>> utf8_version = u.encode('utf-8')             # Encode as UTF-8
-    >>> type(utf8_version), utf8_version
-    (<type 'str'>, '\xea\x80\x80abcd\xde\xb4')
-    >>> u2 = utf8_version.decode('utf-8')            # Decode using UTF-8
-    >>> u == u2                                      # The two strings match
-    True
+    b'&#40960;abcd&#1972;'
 
 The low-level routines for registering and accessing the available encodings are
 found in the :mod:`codecs` module.  However, the encoding and decoding functions
@@ -377,22 +331,14 @@
 Unicode Literals in Python Source Code
 --------------------------------------
 
-In Python source code, Unicode literals are written as strings prefixed with the
-'u' or 'U' character: ``u'abcdefghijk'``.  Specific code points can be written
-using the ``\u`` escape sequence, which is followed by four hex digits giving
-the code point.  The ``\U`` escape sequence is similar, but expects 8 hex
-digits, not 4.
-
-Unicode literals can also use the same escape sequences as 8-bit strings,
-including ``\x``, but ``\x`` only takes two hex digits so it can't express an
-arbitrary code point.  Octal escapes can go up to U+01ff, which is octal 777.
-
-::
-
-    >>> s = u"a\xac\u1234\u20ac\U00008000"
-               ^^^^ two-digit hex escape
-                   ^^^^^^ four-digit Unicode escape
-                               ^^^^^^^^^^ eight-digit Unicode escape
+In Python source code, specific Unicode code points can be written using the
+``\u`` escape sequence, which is followed by four hex digits giving the code
+point.  The ``\U`` escape sequence is similar, but expects 8 hex digits, not 4::
+
+    >>> s = "a\xac\u1234\u20ac\U00008000"
+              ^^^^ two-digit hex escape
+                   ^^^^^ four-digit Unicode escape
+                              ^^^^^^^^^^ eight-digit Unicode escape
     >>> for c in s:  print(ord(c), end=" ")
     ...
     97 172 4660 8364 32768
@@ -400,7 +346,7 @@
 Using escape sequences for code points greater than 127 is fine in small doses,
 but becomes an annoyance if you're using many accented characters, as you would
 in a program with messages in French or some other accent-using language.  You
-can also assemble strings using the :func:`unichr` built-in function, but this is
+can also assemble strings using the :func:`chr` built-in function, but this is
 even more tedious.
 
 Ideally, you'd want to be able to write literals in your language's natural
@@ -408,14 +354,15 @@
 which would display the accented characters naturally, and have the right
 characters used at runtime.
 
-Python supports writing Unicode literals in any encoding, but you have to
-declare the encoding being used.  This is done by including a special comment as
-either the first or second line of the source file::
+Python supports writing Unicode literals in UTF-8 by default, but you can use
+(almost) any encoding if you declare the encoding being used.  This is done by
+including a special comment as either the first or second line of the source
+file::
 
     #!/usr/bin/env python
     # -*- coding: latin-1 -*-
 
-    u = u'abcdé'
+    u = 'abcdé'
     print(ord(u[-1]))
 
 The syntax is inspired by Emacs's notation for specifying variables local to a
@@ -424,22 +371,8 @@
 them, you must supply the name ``coding`` and the name of your chosen encoding,
 separated by ``':'``.
 
-If you don't include such a comment, the default encoding used will be ASCII.
-Versions of Python before 2.4 were Euro-centric and assumed Latin-1 as a default
-encoding for string literals; in Python 2.4, characters greater than 127 still
-work but result in a warning.  For example, the following program has no
-encoding declaration::
-
-    #!/usr/bin/env python
-    u = u'abcdé'
-    print(ord(u[-1]))
-
-When you run it with Python 2.4, it will output the following warning::
-
-    amk:~$ python p263.py
-    sys:1: DeprecationWarning: Non-ASCII character '\xe9'
-         in file p263.py on line 2, but no encoding declared;
-         see http://www.python.org/peps/pep-0263.html for details
+If you don't include such a comment, the default encoding used will be UTF-8 as
+already mentioned.
 
 
 Unicode Properties
@@ -457,7 +390,7 @@
 
     import unicodedata
 
-    u = unichr(233) + unichr(0x0bf2) + unichr(3972) + unichr(6000) + unichr(13231)
+    u = chr(233) + chr(0x0bf2) + chr(3972) + chr(6000) + chr(13231)
 
     for i, c in enumerate(u):
         print(i, '%04x' % ord(c), unicodedata.category(c), end=" ")
@@ -487,8 +420,8 @@
 References
 ----------
 
-The Unicode and 8-bit string types are described in the Python library reference
-at :ref:`typesseq`.
+The ``str`` type is described in the Python library reference at
+:ref:`typesseq`.
 
 The documentation for the :mod:`unicodedata` module.
 
@@ -557,7 +490,7 @@
 writing::
 
     f = codecs.open('test', encoding='utf-8', mode='w+')
-    f.write(u'\u4500 blah blah blah\n')
+    f.write('\u4500 blah blah blah\n')
     f.seek(0)
     print(repr(f.readline()[:1]))
     f.close()
@@ -590,7 +523,7 @@
 usually just provide the Unicode string as the filename, and it will be
 automatically converted to the right encoding for you::
 
-    filename = u'filename\u4500abc'
+    filename = 'filename\u4500abc'
     f = open(filename, 'w')
     f.write('blah\n')
     f.close()
@@ -607,7 +540,7 @@
 path will return the 8-bit versions of the filenames.  For example, assuming the
 default filesystem encoding is UTF-8, running the following program::
 
-	fn = u'filename\u4500abc'
+	fn = 'filename\u4500abc'
 	f = open(fn, 'w')
 	f.close()
 
@@ -619,7 +552,7 @@
 
 	amk:~$ python t.py
 	['.svn', 'filename\xe4\x94\x80abc', ...]
-	[u'.svn', u'filename\u4500abc', ...]
+	['.svn', 'filename\u4500abc', ...]
 
 The first list contains UTF-8-encoded filenames, and the second list contains
 the Unicode versions.

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/array.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/array.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/array.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -183,18 +183,6 @@
    returned.
 
 
-.. method:: array.read(f, n)
-
-   .. deprecated:: 1.5.1
-      Use the :meth:`fromfile` method.
-
-   Read *n* items (as machine values) from the file object *f* and append them to
-   the end of the array.  If less than *n* items are available, :exc:`EOFError` is
-   raised, but the items that were available are still inserted into the array.
-   *f* must be a real built-in file object; something else with a :meth:`read`
-   method won't do.
-
-
 .. method:: array.remove(x)
 
    Remove the first occurrence of *x* from the array.
@@ -229,13 +217,6 @@
    obtain a unicode string from an array of some other type.
 
 
-.. method:: array.write(f)
-
-   .. deprecated:: 1.5.1
-      Use the :meth:`tofile` method.
-
-   Write all items (as machine values) to the file object *f*.
-
 When an array object is printed or converted to a string, it is represented as
 ``array(typecode, initializer)``.  The *initializer* is omitted if the array is
 empty, otherwise it is a string if the *typecode* is ``'c'``, otherwise it is a

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/collections.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/collections.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/collections.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -403,7 +403,7 @@
    Any valid Python identifier may be used for a fieldname except for names
    starting with an underscore.  Valid identifiers consist of letters, digits,
    and underscores but do not start with a digit or underscore and cannot be
-   a :mod:`keyword` such as *class*, *for*, *return*, *global*, *pass*, *print*,
+   a :mod:`keyword` such as *class*, *for*, *return*, *global*, *pass*,
    or *raise*.
 
    If *verbose* is true, the class definition is printed just before being built.

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/configparser.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/configparser.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/configparser.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -199,7 +199,7 @@
 .. method:: RawConfigParser.read(filenames)
 
    Attempt to read and parse a list of filenames, returning a list of filenames
-   which were successfully parsed.  If *filenames* is a string or Unicode string,
+   which were successfully parsed.  If *filenames* is a string,
    it is treated as a single filename. If a file named in *filenames* cannot be
    opened, that file will be ignored.  This is designed so that you can specify a
    list of potential configuration file locations (for example, the current
@@ -330,8 +330,8 @@
 .. method:: SafeConfigParser.set(section, option, value)
 
    If the given section exists, set the given option to the specified value;
-   otherwise raise :exc:`NoSectionError`.  *value* must be a string (:class:`str`
-   or :class:`unicode`); if not, :exc:`TypeError` is raised.
+   otherwise raise :exc:`NoSectionError`.  *value* must be a string; if it is
+   not, :exc:`TypeError` is raised.
 
 
 Examples
@@ -373,12 +373,12 @@
    # getint() and getboolean() also do this for their respective types
    float = config.getfloat('Section1', 'float')
    int = config.getint('Section1', 'int')
-   print float + int
+   print(float + int)
 
    # Notice that the next output does not interpolate '%(bar)s' or '%(baz)s'.
    # This is because we are using a RawConfigParser().
    if config.getboolean('Section1', 'bool'):
-       print config.get('Section1', 'foo')
+       print(config.get('Section1', 'foo'))
 
 To get interpolation, you will need to use a :class:`ConfigParser` or
 :class:`SafeConfigParser`::
@@ -389,13 +389,13 @@
    config.read('example.cfg')
 
    # Set the third, optional argument of get to 1 if you wish to use raw mode.
-   print config.get('Section1', 'foo', 0) # -> "Python is fun!"
-   print config.get('Section1', 'foo', 1) # -> "%(bar)s is %(baz)s!"
+   print(config.get('Section1', 'foo', 0)) # -> "Python is fun!"
+   print(config.get('Section1', 'foo', 1)) # -> "%(bar)s is %(baz)s!"
 
    # The optional fourth argument is a dict with members that will take
    # precedence in interpolation.
-   print config.get('Section1', 'foo', 0, {'bar': 'Documentation',
-                                           'baz': 'evil'})
+   print(config.get('Section1', 'foo', 0, {'bar': 'Documentation',
+                                           'baz': 'evil'}))
 
 Defaults are available in all three types of ConfigParsers. They are used in 
 interpolation if an option used is not defined elsewhere. ::
@@ -406,10 +406,10 @@
    config = ConfigParser.SafeConfigParser({'bar': 'Life', 'baz': 'hard'})
    config.read('example.cfg')
    
-   print config.get('Section1', 'foo') # -> "Python is fun!"
+   print(config.get('Section1', 'foo')) # -> "Python is fun!"
    config.remove_option('Section1', 'bar')
    config.remove_option('Section1', 'baz')
-   print config.get('Section1', 'foo') # -> "Life is hard!"
+   print(config.get('Section1', 'foo')) # -> "Life is hard!"
 
 The function ``opt_move`` below can be used to move options between sections::
 

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/csv.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/csv.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/csv.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -86,7 +86,7 @@
       >>> import csv
       >>> spamReader = csv.reader(open('eggs.csv'), delimiter=' ', quotechar='|')
       >>> for row in spamReader:
-      ...     print ', '.join(row)
+      ...     print(', '.join(row))
       Spam, Spam, Spam, Spam, Spam, Baked Beans
       Spam, Lovely Spam, Wonderful Spam
 
@@ -121,7 +121,7 @@
 
 .. function:: register_dialect(name[, dialect][, fmtparam])
 
-   Associate *dialect* with *name*.  *name* must be a string or Unicode object. The
+   Associate *dialect* with *name*.  *name* must be a string. The
    dialect can be specified either by passing a sub-class of :class:`Dialect`, or
    by *fmtparam* keyword arguments, or both, with keyword arguments overriding
    parameters of the dialect. For full details about the dialect and formatting

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/datatypes.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/datatypes.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/datatypes.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -11,8 +11,8 @@
 
 Python also provides some built-in data types, in particular,
 :class:`dict`, :class:`list`, :class:`set` and :class:`frozenset`, and
-:class:`tuple`.  The :class:`str` class can be used to handle binary data
-and 8-bit text, and the :class:`unicode` class to handle Unicode text.
+:class:`tuple`.  The :class:`str` class can be used to strings, including
+Unicode strings, and the :class:`bytes` class to handle binary data.
 
 The following modules are documented in this chapter:
 

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/easydialogs.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/easydialogs.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/easydialogs.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -107,7 +107,7 @@
    *actionButtonLabel* is a string to show instead of "Open" in the OK button,
    *cancelButtonLabel* is a string to show instead of "Cancel" in the cancel
    button, *wanted* is the type of value wanted as a return: :class:`str`,
-   :class:`unicode`, :class:`FSSpec`, :class:`FSRef` and subtypes thereof are
+   :class:`FSSpec`, :class:`FSRef` and subtypes thereof are
    acceptable.
 
    .. index:: single: Navigation Services

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/email.charset.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/email.charset.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/email.charset.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -242,6 +242,6 @@
    Add a codec that map characters in the given character set to and from Unicode.
 
    *charset* is the canonical name of a character set. *codecname* is the name of a
-   Python codec, as appropriate for the second argument to the :func:`unicode`
-   built-in, or to the :meth:`encode` method of a Unicode string.
+   Python codec, as appropriate for the second argument to the :class:`str`'s
+   :func:`decode` method
 

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/email.header.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/email.header.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/email.header.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -53,8 +53,8 @@
 
    Optional *s* is the initial header value.  If ``None`` (the default), the
    initial header value is not set.  You can later append to the header with
-   :meth:`append` method calls.  *s* may be a byte string or a Unicode string, but
-   see the :meth:`append` documentation for semantics.
+   :meth:`append` method calls.  *s* may be an instance of :class:`bytes` or
+   :class:`str`, but see the :meth:`append` documentation for semantics.
 
    Optional *charset* serves two purposes: it has the same meaning as the *charset*
    argument to the :meth:`append` method.  It also sets the default character set
@@ -86,19 +86,19 @@
    a :class:`Charset` instance.  A value of ``None`` (the default) means that the
    *charset* given in the constructor is used.
 
-   *s* may be a byte string or a Unicode string.  If it is a byte string (i.e.
-   ``isinstance(s, str)`` is true), then *charset* is the encoding of that byte
-   string, and a :exc:`UnicodeError` will be raised if the string cannot be decoded
-   with that character set.
+   *s* may be an instance of :class:`bytes` or :class:`str`.  If it is an instance
+   of :class:`bytes`, then *charset* is the encoding of that byte string, and a 
+   :exc:`UnicodeError` will be raised if the string cannot be decoded with that
+   character set.
 
-   If *s* is a Unicode string, then *charset* is a hint specifying the character
-   set of the characters in the string.  In this case, when producing an
+   If *s* is an instance of :class:`str`, then *charset* is a hint specifying the
+   character set of the characters in the string.  In this case, when producing an
    :rfc:`2822`\ -compliant header using :rfc:`2047` rules, the Unicode string will
    be encoded using the following charsets in order: ``us-ascii``, the *charset*
    hint, ``utf-8``.  The first character set to not provoke a :exc:`UnicodeError`
    is used.
 
-   Optional *errors* is passed through to any :func:`unicode` or
+   Optional *errors* is passed through to any :func:`encode` or
    :func:`ustr.encode` call, and defaults to "strict".
 
 
@@ -121,7 +121,7 @@
 
 .. method:: Header.__unicode__()
 
-   A helper for the built-in :func:`unicode` function.  Returns the header as a
+   A helper for :class:`str`'s :func:`encode` method.  Returns the header as a
    Unicode string.
 
 

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/email.util.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/email.util.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/email.util.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -130,10 +130,10 @@
    When a header parameter is encoded in :rfc:`2231` format,
    :meth:`Message.get_param` may return a 3-tuple containing the character set,
    language, and value.  :func:`collapse_rfc2231_value` turns this into a unicode
-   string.  Optional *errors* is passed to the *errors* argument of the built-in
-   :func:`unicode` function; it defaults to ``replace``.  Optional
+   string.  Optional *errors* is passed to the *errors* argument of :class:`str`'s
+   :func:`encode` method; it defaults to ``'replace'``.  Optional
    *fallback_charset* specifies the character set to use if the one in the
-   :rfc:`2231` header is not known by Python; it defaults to ``us-ascii``.
+   :rfc:`2231` header is not known by Python; it defaults to ``'us-ascii'``.
 
    For convenience, if the *value* passed to :func:`collapse_rfc2231_value` is not
    a tuple, it should be a string and it is returned unquoted.

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/fcntl.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/fcntl.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/fcntl.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -47,7 +47,6 @@
 .. function:: ioctl(fd, op[, arg[, mutate_flag]])
 
    This function is identical to the :func:`fcntl` function, except that the
-   operations are typically defined in the library module :mod:`termios` and the
    argument handling is even more complicated.
 
    The parameter *arg* can be one of an integer, absent (treated identically to the

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/fileinput.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/fileinput.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/fileinput.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -168,9 +168,3 @@
 
    Usage example: ``fi =
    fileinput.FileInput(openhook=fileinput.hook_encoded("iso-8859-1"))``
-
-   .. note::
-
-      With this hook, :class:`FileInput` might return Unicode strings depending on the
-      specified *encoding*.
-

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/functions.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/functions.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/functions.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -129,7 +129,7 @@
    different ways:
 
    * If it is a *string*, you must also give the *encoding* (and optionally,
-     *errors*) parameters; :func:`bytearray` then converts the Unicode string to
+     *errors*) parameters; :func:`bytearray` then converts the string to
      bytes using :meth:`str.encode`.
 
    * If it is an *integer*, the array will have that size and will be
@@ -415,10 +415,9 @@
    .. warning::
 
       The default *locals* act as described for function :func:`locals` below:
-      modifications to the default *locals* dictionary should not be attempted.  Pass
-      an explicit *locals* dictionary if you need to see effects of the code on
-      *locals* after function :func:`execfile` returns.  :func:`exec` cannot be
-      used reliably to modify a function's locals.
+      modifications to the default *locals* dictionary should not be attempted.
+      Pass an explicit *locals* dictionary if you need to see effects of the
+      code on *locals* after function :func:`exec` returns.
 
 
 .. function:: filter(function, iterable)
@@ -805,16 +804,17 @@
    :mod:`fileinput`, :mod:`os`, :mod:`os.path`, :mod:`tempfile`, and
    :mod:`shutil`.
 
+
+.. XXX works for bytes too, but should it?
 .. function:: ord(c)
 
    Given a string of length one, return an integer representing the Unicode code
-   point of the character when the argument is a unicode object, or the value of
-   the byte when the argument is an 8-bit string. For example, ``ord('a')`` returns
-   the integer ``97``, ``ord(u'\u2020')`` returns ``8224``.  This is the inverse of
-   :func:`chr` for 8-bit strings and of :func:`unichr` for unicode objects.  If a
-   unicode argument is given and Python was built with UCS2 Unicode, then the
-   character's code point must be in the range [0..65535] inclusive; otherwise the
-   string length is two, and a :exc:`TypeError` will be raised.
+   point of the character.  For example, ``ord('a')`` returns the integer ``97``
+   and ``ord('\u2020')`` returns ``8224``.  This is the inverse of :func:`chr`.
+
+   If the argument length is not one, a :exc:`TypeError` will be raised.  (If
+   Python was built with UCS2 Unicode, then the character's code point must be
+   in the range [0..65535] inclusive; otherwise the string length is two!)
 
 
 .. function:: pow(x, y[, z])
@@ -838,6 +838,22 @@
    accidents.)
 
 
+.. function:: print([object, ...][, sep=' '][, end='\n'][, file=sys.stdout])
+
+   Print *object*\(s) to the stream *file*, separated by *sep* and followed by
+   *end*.  *sep*, *end* and *file*, if present, must be given as keyword
+   arguments.
+
+   All non-keyword arguments are converted to strings like :func:`str` does and
+   written to the stream, separated by *sep* and followed by *end*.  Both *sep*
+   and *end* must be strings; they can also be ``None``, which means to use the
+   default values.  If no *object* is given, :func:`print` will just write
+   *end*.
+
+   The *file* argument must be an object with a ``write(string)`` method; if it
+   is not present or ``None``, :data:`sys.stdout` will be used.
+
+
 .. function:: property([fget[, fset[, fdel[, doc]]]])
 
    Return a property attribute.

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/gettext.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/gettext.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/gettext.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -136,9 +136,9 @@
 greater convenience than the GNU :program:`gettext` API.  It is the recommended
 way of localizing your Python applications and modules.  :mod:`gettext` defines
 a "translations" class which implements the parsing of GNU :file:`.mo` format
-files, and has methods for returning either standard 8-bit strings or Unicode
-strings. Instances of this "translations" class can also install themselves  in
-the built-in namespace as the function :func:`_`.
+files, and has methods for returning strings. Instances of this "translations"
+class can also install themselves in the built-in namespace as the function
+:func:`_`.
 
 
 .. function:: find(domain[, localedir[,  languages[, all]]])
@@ -257,8 +257,7 @@
 .. method:: NullTranslations.ugettext(message)
 
    If a fallback has been set, forward :meth:`ugettext` to the fallback. Otherwise,
-   return the translated message as a Unicode string. Overridden in derived
-   classes.
+   return the translated message as a string. Overridden in derived classes.
 
 
 .. method:: NullTranslations.ngettext(singular, plural, n)
@@ -276,7 +275,7 @@
 .. method:: NullTranslations.ungettext(singular, plural, n)
 
    If a fallback has been set, forward :meth:`ungettext` to the fallback.
-   Otherwise, return the translated message as a Unicode string. Overridden in
+   Otherwise, return the translated message as a  string. Overridden in
    derived classes.
 
 
@@ -347,8 +346,8 @@
 ``None`` if not found.  If the charset encoding is specified, then all message
 ids and message strings read from the catalog are converted to Unicode using
 this encoding.  The :meth:`ugettext` method always returns a Unicode, while the
-:meth:`gettext` returns an encoded 8-bit string.  For the message id arguments
-of both methods, either Unicode strings or 8-bit strings containing only
+:meth:`gettext` returns an encoded bytestring.  For the message id arguments
+of both methods, either Unicode strings or bytestrings containing only
 US-ASCII characters are acceptable.  Note that the Unicode version of the
 methods (i.e. :meth:`ugettext` and :meth:`ungettext`) are the recommended
 interface to use for internationalized Python programs.
@@ -366,7 +365,7 @@
 .. method:: GNUTranslations.gettext(message)
 
    Look up the *message* id in the catalog and return the corresponding message
-   string, as an 8-bit string encoded with the catalog's charset encoding, if
+   string, as a bytestring encoded with the catalog's charset encoding, if
    known.  If there is no entry in the catalog for the *message* id, and a fallback
    has been set, the look up is forwarded to the fallback's :meth:`gettext` method.
    Otherwise, the *message* id is returned.
@@ -382,7 +381,7 @@
 .. method:: GNUTranslations.ugettext(message)
 
    Look up the *message* id in the catalog and return the corresponding message
-   string, as a Unicode string.  If there is no entry in the catalog for the
+   string, as a string.  If there is no entry in the catalog for the
    *message* id, and a fallback has been set, the look up is forwarded to the
    fallback's :meth:`ugettext` method.  Otherwise, the *message* id is returned.
 
@@ -391,7 +390,7 @@
 
    Do a plural-forms lookup of a message id.  *singular* is used as the message id
    for purposes of lookup in the catalog, while *n* is used to determine which
-   plural form to use.  The returned message string is an 8-bit string encoded with
+   plural form to use.  The returned message string is a bytestring encoded with
    the catalog's charset encoding, if known.
 
    If the message id is not found in the catalog, and a fallback is specified, the
@@ -410,7 +409,7 @@
 
    Do a plural-forms lookup of a message id.  *singular* is used as the message id
    for purposes of lookup in the catalog, while *n* is used to determine which
-   plural form to use.  The returned message string is a Unicode string.
+   plural form to use.  The returned message string is a string.
 
    If the message id is not found in the catalog, and a fallback is specified, the
    request is forwarded to the fallback's :meth:`ungettext` method.  Otherwise,

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/imp.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/imp.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/imp.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -185,6 +185,19 @@
    continue to use the old class definition.  The same is true for derived classes.
 
 
+.. function:: acquire_lock()
+
+   Acquires the interpreter's import lock for the current thread.  This lock should
+   be used by import hooks to ensure thread-safety when importing modules. On
+   platforms without threads, this function does nothing.
+
+
+.. function:: release_lock()
+
+   Release the interpreter's import lock. On platforms without threads, this
+   function does nothing.
+
+
 The following constants with integer values, defined in this module, are used to
 indicate the search result of :func:`find_module`.
 

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/itertools.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/itertools.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/itertools.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -177,7 +177,8 @@
 
    Make an iterator that filters elements from iterable returning only those for
    which the predicate is ``True``. If *predicate* is ``None``, return the items
-   that are true. Equivalent to::
+   that are true.  This function is the same as the built-in :func:`filter`
+   function.  Equivalent to::
 
       def ifilter(predicate, iterable):
           if predicate is None:
@@ -204,7 +205,8 @@
 .. function:: imap(function, *iterables)
 
    Make an iterator that computes the function using arguments from each of the
-   iterables.  Equivalent to::
+   iterables.  This function is the same as the built-in :func:`map` function.
+   Equivalent to::
 
       def imap(function, *iterables):
           iterables = [iter(it) for it in iterables)
@@ -230,7 +232,7 @@
 
       def islice(iterable, *args):
           s = slice(*args)
-          it = iter(range(s.start or 0, s.stop or sys.maxsize, s.step or 1))
+          it = range(s.start or 0, s.stop or sys.maxsize, s.step or 1)
           nexti = next(it)
           for i, element in enumerate(iterable):
               if i == nexti:

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/logging.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/logging.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/logging.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -95,7 +95,7 @@
    logfiles = glob.glob('%s*' % LOG_FILENAME)
 
    for filename in logfiles:
-       print filename
+       print(filename)
 
 The result should be 6 separate files, each with part of the log history for the
 application::
@@ -2428,13 +2428,13 @@
     HOST = 'localhost'
     PORT = 9999
     s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
-    print "connecting..."
+    print("connecting...")
     s.connect((HOST, PORT))
-    print "sending config..."
+    print("sending config...")
     s.send(struct.pack(">L", len(data_to_send)))
     s.send(data_to_send)
     s.close()
-    print "complete"
+    print("complete")
 
 
 More examples

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/mailbox.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/mailbox.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/mailbox.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -1643,7 +1643,7 @@
 
    list_names = ('python-list', 'python-dev', 'python-bugs')
 
-   boxes = dict((name, mailbox.mbox('~/email/%s' % name)) for name in list_names)
+   boxes = {name: mailbox.mbox('~/email/%s' % name) for name in list_names}
    inbox = mailbox.Maildir('~/Maildir', factory=None)
 
    for key in inbox.iterkeys():

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/marshal.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/marshal.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/marshal.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -38,7 +38,7 @@
 Not all Python object types are supported; in general, only objects whose value
 is independent from a particular invocation of Python can be written and read by
 this module.  The following types are supported: ``None``, integers,
-floating point numbers, strings, Unicode objects, tuples, lists, sets,
+floating point numbers, strings, bytes, bytearrays, tuples, lists, sets,
 dictionaries, and code objects, where it should be understood that tuples, lists
 and dictionaries are only supported as long as the values contained therein are
 themselves supported; and recursive lists and dictionaries should not be written

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/operator.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/operator.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/operator.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -93,13 +93,6 @@
    Return the bitwise and of *a* and *b*.
 
 
-.. function:: div(a, b)
-              __div__(a, b)
-
-   Return ``a / b`` when ``__future__.division`` is not in effect.  This is
-   also known as "classic" division.
-
-
 .. function:: floordiv(a, b)
               __floordiv__(a, b)
 
@@ -171,8 +164,8 @@
 .. function:: truediv(a, b)
               __truediv__(a, b)
 
-   Return ``a / b`` when ``__future__.division`` is in effect.  This is also
-   known as "true" division.
+   Return ``a / b`` where 2/3 is .66 rather than 0.  This is also known as
+   "true" division.
 
 
 .. function:: xor(a, b)
@@ -211,7 +204,7 @@
 
    Remove the value of *a* at index *b*.
 
-
+ 
 .. function:: delslice(a, b, c)
               __delslice__(a, b, c)
 
@@ -241,14 +234,6 @@
    Return ``a * b`` where *a* is a sequence and *b* is an integer.
 
 
-.. function:: sequenceIncludes(...)
-
-   .. deprecated:: 2.0
-      Use :func:`contains` instead.
-
-   Alias for :func:`contains`.
-
-
 .. function:: setitem(a, b, c)
               __setitem__(a, b, c)
 
@@ -260,6 +245,7 @@
 
    Set the slice of *a* from index *b* to index *c-1* to the sequence *v*.
 
+
 Many operations have an "in-place" version.  The following functions provide a
 more primitive access to in-place operators than the usual syntax does; for
 example, the :term:`statement` ``x += y`` is equivalent to
@@ -285,13 +271,6 @@
    ``a = iconcat(a, b)`` is equivalent to ``a += b`` for *a* and *b* sequences.
 
 
-.. function:: idiv(a, b)
-              __idiv__(a, b)
-
-   ``a = idiv(a, b)`` is equivalent to ``a /= b`` when ``__future__.division`` is
-   not in effect.
-
-
 .. function:: ifloordiv(a, b)
               __ifloordiv__(a, b)
 
@@ -350,8 +329,7 @@
 .. function:: itruediv(a, b)
               __itruediv__(a, b)
 
-   ``a = itruediv(a, b)`` is equivalent to ``a /= b`` when ``__future__.division``
-   is in effect.
+   ``a = itruediv(a, b)`` is equivalent to ``a /= b``.
 
 
 .. function:: ixor(a, b)
@@ -363,10 +341,11 @@
 The :mod:`operator` module also defines a few predicates to test the type of
 objects.
 
+.. XXX just remove them?
 .. note::
 
-   Be careful not to misinterpret the results of these functions; only
-   :func:`isCallable` has any measure of reliability with instance objects.
+   Be careful not to misinterpret the results of these functions; none have any
+   measure of reliability with instance objects.
    For example::
 
       >>> class C:
@@ -379,21 +358,10 @@
 
 .. note::
 
-   Python 3 is expected to introduce abstract base classes for
-   collection types, so it should be possible to write, for example,
-   ``isinstance(obj, collections.Mapping)`` and ``isinstance(obj,
+   Since there are now abstract classes for collection types, you should write,
+   for example, ``isinstance(obj, collections.Mapping)`` and ``isinstance(obj,
    collections.Sequence)``.
 
-.. function:: isCallable(obj)
-
-   .. deprecated:: 2.0
-      Use the :func:`callable` built-in function instead.
-
-   Returns true if the object *obj* can be called like a function, otherwise it
-   returns false.  True is returned for functions, instance methods, class
-   objects, and instance objects which support the :meth:`__call__` method.
-
-
 .. function:: isMappingType(obj)
 
    Returns true if the object *obj* supports the mapping interface. This is true for
@@ -492,11 +460,7 @@
 +-----------------------+-------------------------+---------------------------------+
 | Containment Test      | ``obj in seq``          | ``contains(seq, obj)``          |
 +-----------------------+-------------------------+---------------------------------+
-| Division              | ``a / b``               | ``div(a, b)`` (without          |
-|                       |                         | ``__future__.division``)        |
-+-----------------------+-------------------------+---------------------------------+
-| Division              | ``a / b``               | ``truediv(a, b)`` (with         |
-|                       |                         | ``__future__.division``)        |
+| Division              | ``a / b``               | ``truediv(a, b)``               |
 +-----------------------+-------------------------+---------------------------------+
 | Division              | ``a // b``              | ``floordiv(a, b)``              |
 +-----------------------+-------------------------+---------------------------------+

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/os.path.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/os.path.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/os.path.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -288,5 +288,5 @@
 .. data:: supports_unicode_filenames
 
    True if arbitrary Unicode strings can be used as file names (within limitations
-   imposed by the file system), and if :func:`os.listdir` returns Unicode strings
-   for a Unicode argument.
+   imposed by the file system), and if :func:`os.listdir` returns strings that
+   contain characters that cannot be represented by ASCII.

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/os.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/os.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/os.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -701,13 +701,13 @@
 
 .. function:: getcwd()
 
-   Return a string representing the current working directory. Availability:
-   Macintosh, Unix, Windows.
+   Return a bytestring representing the current working directory.
+   Availability: Macintosh, Unix, Windows.
 
 
 .. function:: getcwdu()
 
-   Return a Unicode object representing the current working directory.
+   Return a string representing the current working directory.
    Availability: Macintosh, Unix, Windows.
 
 

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/pickle.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/pickle.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/pickle.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -327,7 +327,7 @@
 
 * integers, floating point numbers, complex numbers
 
-* normal and Unicode strings
+* strings, bytes, bytearrays
 
 * tuples, lists, sets, and dictionaries containing only picklable objects
 
@@ -659,7 +659,7 @@
    import pickle
 
    data1 = {'a': [1, 2.0, 3, 4+6j],
-            'b': ('string', u'Unicode string'),
+            'b': ("string", "string using Unicode features \u0394"),
             'c': None}
 
    selfref_list = [1, 2, 3]

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/pkgutil.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/pkgutil.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/pkgutil.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -34,8 +34,7 @@
    returned.  Items are only appended to the copy at the end.
 
    It is assumed that ``sys.path`` is a sequence.  Items of ``sys.path`` that are
-   not (Unicode or 8-bit) strings referring to existing directories are ignored.
-   Unicode items on ``sys.path`` that cause errors when used as filenames may cause
-   this function to raise an exception (in line with :func:`os.path.isdir`
-   behavior).
+   not strings referring to existing directories are ignored. Unicode items on
+   ``sys.path`` that cause errors when used as filenames may cause this function
+   to raise an exception (in line with :func:`os.path.isdir` behavior).
 

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/re.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/re.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/re.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -1153,7 +1153,7 @@
 
    >>> text = "He was carefully disguised but captured quickly by police."
    >>> for m in re.finditer(r"\w+ly", text):
-         print '%02d-%02d: %s' % (m.start(), m.end(), m.group(0))
+         print('%02d-%02d: %s' % (m.start(), m.end(), m.group(0)))
    07-16: carefully
    40-47: quickly
 

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/simplexmlrpcserver.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/simplexmlrpcserver.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/simplexmlrpcserver.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -149,7 +149,7 @@
    s = xmlrpclib.ServerProxy('http://localhost:8000')
    print(s.pow(2,3))  # Returns 2**3 = 8
    print(s.add(2,3))  # Returns 5
-   print(s.div(5,2))  # Returns 5//2 = 2
+   print(s.mul(5,2))  # Returns 5*2 = 10
 
    # Print list of available methods
    print(s.system.listMethods())

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/sqlite3.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/sqlite3.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/sqlite3.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -184,7 +184,7 @@
    Registers a callable to convert the custom Python type *type* into one of
    SQLite's supported types. The callable *callable* accepts as single parameter
    the Python value, and must return a value of the following types: int,
-   float, str (UTF-8 encoded), unicode or buffer.
+   float, str, bytes (UTF-8 encoded) or buffer.
 
 
 .. function:: complete_statement(sql)
@@ -258,7 +258,7 @@
    parameters the function accepts, and *func* is a Python callable that is called
    as the SQL function.
 
-   The function can return any of the types supported by SQLite: unicode, str, int,
+   The function can return any of the types supported by SQLite: bytes, str, int,
    float, buffer and None.
 
    Example:
@@ -275,7 +275,7 @@
    final result of the aggregate.
 
    The ``finalize`` method can return any of the types supported by SQLite:
-   unicode, str, int, float, buffer and None.
+   bytes, str, int, float, buffer and None.
 
    Example:
 
@@ -354,13 +354,13 @@
 .. attribute:: Connection.text_factory
 
    Using this attribute you can control what objects are returned for the TEXT data
-   type. By default, this attribute is set to :class:`unicode` and the
-   :mod:`sqlite3` module will return Unicode objects for TEXT. If you want to
-   return bytestrings instead, you can set it to :class:`str`.
-
-   For efficiency reasons, there's also a way to return Unicode objects only for
-   non-ASCII data, and bytestrings otherwise. To activate it, set this attribute to
-   :const:`sqlite3.OptimizedUnicode`.
+   type. By default, this attribute is set to :class:`str` and the
+   :mod:`sqlite3` module will return strings for TEXT. If you want to
+   return bytestrings instead, you can set it to :class:`bytes`.
+
+   For efficiency reasons, there's also a way to return :class:`str` objects
+   only for non-ASCII data, and :class:`bytes` otherwise. To activate it, set
+   this attribute to :const:`sqlite3.OptimizedUnicode`.
 
    You can also set it to any other callable that accepts a single bytestring
    parameter and returns the resulting object.
@@ -424,7 +424,7 @@
    at once. It issues a COMMIT statement first, then executes the SQL script it
    gets as a parameter.
 
-   *sql_script* can be a bytestring or a Unicode string.
+   *sql_script* can be an instance of :class:`str` or :class:`bytes`.
 
    Example:
 
@@ -493,21 +493,21 @@
 
 The following Python types can thus be sent to SQLite without any problem:
 
-+------------------------+-------------+
-| Python type            | SQLite type |
-+========================+=============+
-| ``None``               | NULL        |
-+------------------------+-------------+
-| ``int``                | INTEGER     |
-+------------------------+-------------+
-| ``float``              | REAL        |
-+------------------------+-------------+
-| ``str (UTF8-encoded)`` | TEXT        |
-+------------------------+-------------+
-| ``unicode``            | TEXT        |
-+------------------------+-------------+
-| ``buffer``             | BLOB        |
-+------------------------+-------------+
++-------------------------------+-------------+
+| Python type                   | SQLite type |
++===============================+=============+
+| ``None``                      | NULL        |
++-------------------------------+-------------+
+| :class:`int`                  | INTEGER     |
++-------------------------------+-------------+
+| :class:`float`                | REAL        |
++-------------------------------+-------------+
+| :class:`bytes` (UTF8-encoded) | TEXT        |
++-------------------------------+-------------+
+| :class:`str`                  | TEXT        |
++-------------------------------+-------------+
+| :class:`buffer`               | BLOB        |
++-------------------------------+-------------+
 
 This is how SQLite types are converted to Python types by default:
 
@@ -520,7 +520,7 @@
 +-------------+---------------------------------------------+
 | ``REAL``    | float                                       |
 +-------------+---------------------------------------------+
-| ``TEXT``    | depends on text_factory, unicode by default |
+| ``TEXT``    | depends on text_factory, str by default     |
 +-------------+---------------------------------------------+
 | ``BLOB``    | buffer                                      |
 +-------------+---------------------------------------------+
@@ -537,7 +537,7 @@
 As described before, SQLite supports only a limited set of types natively. To
 use other Python types with SQLite, you must **adapt** them to one of the
 sqlite3 module's supported types for SQLite: one of NoneType, int, float,
-str, unicode, buffer.
+str, bytes, buffer.
 
 The :mod:`sqlite3` module uses Python object adaptation, as described in
 :pep:`246` for this.  The protocol to use is :class:`PrepareProtocol`.

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/stdtypes.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/stdtypes.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/stdtypes.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -2070,13 +2070,13 @@
 .. XXX does this still apply?
 .. attribute:: file.encoding
 
-   The encoding that this file uses. When Unicode strings are written to a file,
+   The encoding that this file uses. When strings are written to a file,
    they will be converted to byte strings using this encoding. In addition, when
    the file is connected to a terminal, the attribute gives the encoding that the
    terminal is likely to use (that  information might be incorrect if the user has
    misconfigured the  terminal). The attribute is read-only and may not be present
    on all file-like objects. It may also be ``None``, in which case the file uses
-   the system default encoding for converting Unicode strings.
+   the system default encoding for converting strings.
 
 
 .. attribute:: file.mode

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/string.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/string.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/string.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -538,7 +538,7 @@
 String functions
 ----------------
 
-The following functions are available to operate on string and Unicode objects.
+The following functions are available to operate on string objects.
 They are not available as string methods.
 
 

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/stringio.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/stringio.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/stringio.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -1,3 +1,4 @@
+.. XXX this whole file is outdated
 
 :mod:`StringIO` --- Read and write strings as files
 ===================================================
@@ -9,7 +10,7 @@
 This module implements a file-like class, :class:`StringIO`, that reads and
 writes a string buffer (also known as *memory files*).  See the description of
 file objects for operations (section :ref:`bltin-file-objects`). (For
-standard strings, see :class:`str` and :class:`unicode`.)
+standard strings, see :class:`str`.)
 
 
 .. class:: StringIO([buffer])
@@ -19,20 +20,13 @@
    :class:`StringIO` will start empty. In both cases, the initial file position
    starts at zero.
 
-   The :class:`StringIO` object can accept either Unicode or 8-bit strings, but
-   mixing the two may take some care.  If both are used, 8-bit strings that cannot
-   be interpreted as 7-bit ASCII (that use the 8th bit) will cause a
-   :exc:`UnicodeError` to be raised when :meth:`getvalue` is called.
-
 The following methods of :class:`StringIO` objects require special mention:
 
 
 .. method:: StringIO.getvalue()
 
    Retrieve the entire contents of the "file" at any time before the
-   :class:`StringIO` object's :meth:`close` method is called.  See the note above
-   for information about mixing Unicode and 8-bit strings; such mixing can cause
-   this method to raise :exc:`UnicodeError`.
+   :class:`StringIO` object's :meth:`close` method is called.
 
 
 .. method:: StringIO.close()
@@ -75,11 +69,11 @@
 original :mod:`StringIO` module in that case.
 
 Unlike the memory files implemented by the :mod:`StringIO` module, those
-provided by this module are not able to accept Unicode strings that cannot be
-encoded as plain ASCII strings.
+provided by this module are not able to accept strings that cannot be
+encoded in plain ASCII.
 
-Calling :func:`StringIO` with a Unicode string parameter populates
-the object with the buffer representation of the Unicode string, instead of
+Calling :func:`StringIO` with a string parameter populates
+the object with the buffer representation of the string, instead of
 encoding the string. 
 
 Another difference from the :mod:`StringIO` module is that calling

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/traceback.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/traceback.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/traceback.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -42,7 +42,7 @@
 
 .. function:: print_exc([limit[, file]])
 
-   This is a shorthand for ``print_exception(*sys.exc_info()``.
+   This is a shorthand for ``print_exception(*sys.exc_info())``.
 
 
 .. function:: format_exc([limit])
@@ -172,26 +172,26 @@
        lumberjack()
    except:
        exceptionType, exceptionValue, exceptionTraceback = sys.exc_info()
-       print "*** print_tb:"
+       print("*** print_tb:")
        traceback.print_tb(exceptionTraceback, limit=1, file=sys.stdout)
-       print "*** print_exception:"
+       print("*** print_exception:")
        traceback.print_exception(exceptionType, exceptionValue, exceptionTraceback,
                                  limit=2, file=sys.stdout)
-       print "*** print_exc:"
+       print("*** print_exc:")
        traceback.print_exc()
-       print "*** format_exc, first and last line:"
+       print("*** format_exc, first and last line:")
        formatted_lines = traceback.format_exc().splitlines()
-       print formatted_lines[0]
-       print formatted_lines[-1]
-       print "*** format_exception:"
-       print repr(traceback.format_exception(exceptionType, exceptionValue,
-                                             exceptionTraceback))
-       print "*** extract_tb:"
-       print repr(traceback.extract_tb(exceptionTraceback))
-       print "*** format_tb:"
-       print repr(traceback.format_tb(exceptionTraceback))
-       print "*** tb_lineno:", traceback.tb_lineno(exceptionTraceback)
-   print "*** print_last:"
+       print(formatted_lines[0])
+       print(formatted_lines[-1])
+       print("*** format_exception:")
+       print(repr(traceback.format_exception(exceptionType, exceptionValue,
+                                             exceptionTraceback)))
+       print("*** extract_tb:")
+       print(repr(traceback.extract_tb(exceptionTraceback)))
+       print("*** format_tb:")
+       print(repr(traceback.format_tb(exceptionTraceback)))
+       print("*** tb_lineno:", traceback.tb_lineno(exceptionTraceback))
+   print("*** print_last:")
    traceback.print_last()
 
 
@@ -249,8 +249,8 @@
    ... 
    >>> def lumberstack():
    ...     traceback.print_stack()
-   ...     print repr(traceback.extract_stack())
-   ...     print repr(traceback.format_stack())
+   ...     print(repr(traceback.extract_stack()))
+   ...     print(repr(traceback.format_stack()))
    ... 
    >>> another_function()
      File "<doctest>", line 10, in <module>
@@ -261,10 +261,10 @@
        traceback.print_stack()
    [('<doctest>', 10, '<module>', 'another_function()'),
     ('<doctest>', 3, 'another_function', 'lumberstack()'),
-    ('<doctest>', 7, 'lumberstack', 'print repr(traceback.extract_stack())')]
+    ('<doctest>', 7, 'lumberstack', 'print(repr(traceback.extract_stack()))')]
    ['  File "<doctest>", line 10, in <module>\n    another_function()\n',
     '  File "<doctest>", line 3, in another_function\n    lumberstack()\n',
-    '  File "<doctest>", line 8, in lumberstack\n    print repr(traceback.format_stack())\n']
+    '  File "<doctest>", line 8, in lumberstack\n    print(repr(traceback.format_stack()))\n']
 
 
 This last example demonstrates the final few formatting functions::

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/undoc.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/undoc.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/undoc.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -61,18 +61,6 @@
    :synopsis: Rudimentary decoder for AppleSingle format files.
 
 
-
-:mod:`buildtools` --- Helper module for BuildApplet and Friends
----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-.. module:: buildtools
-   :platform: Mac
-   :synopsis: Helper module for BuildApplet, BuildApplication and macfreeze.
-
-
-.. deprecated:: 2.4
-
-
 :mod:`icopen` --- Internet Config replacement for :meth:`open`
 --------------------------------------------------------------
 

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/unicodedata.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/unicodedata.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/unicodedata.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -27,72 +27,72 @@
 .. function:: lookup(name)
 
    Look up character by name.  If a character with the given name is found, return
-   the corresponding Unicode character.  If not found, :exc:`KeyError` is raised.
+   the corresponding character.  If not found, :exc:`KeyError` is raised.
 
 
-.. function:: name(unichr[, default])
+.. function:: name(chr[, default])
 
-   Returns the name assigned to the Unicode character *unichr* as a string. If no
+   Returns the name assigned to the character *chr* as a string. If no
    name is defined, *default* is returned, or, if not given, :exc:`ValueError` is
    raised.
 
 
-.. function:: decimal(unichr[, default])
+.. function:: decimal(chr[, default])
 
-   Returns the decimal value assigned to the Unicode character *unichr* as integer.
+   Returns the decimal value assigned to the character *chr* as integer.
    If no such value is defined, *default* is returned, or, if not given,
    :exc:`ValueError` is raised.
 
 
-.. function:: digit(unichr[, default])
+.. function:: digit(chr[, default])
 
-   Returns the digit value assigned to the Unicode character *unichr* as integer.
+   Returns the digit value assigned to the character *chr* as integer.
    If no such value is defined, *default* is returned, or, if not given,
    :exc:`ValueError` is raised.
 
 
-.. function:: numeric(unichr[, default])
+.. function:: numeric(chr[, default])
 
-   Returns the numeric value assigned to the Unicode character *unichr* as float.
+   Returns the numeric value assigned to the character *chr* as float.
    If no such value is defined, *default* is returned, or, if not given,
    :exc:`ValueError` is raised.
 
 
-.. function:: category(unichr)
+.. function:: category(chr)
 
-   Returns the general category assigned to the Unicode character *unichr* as
+   Returns the general category assigned to the character *chr* as
    string.
 
 
-.. function:: bidirectional(unichr)
+.. function:: bidirectional(chr)
 
-   Returns the bidirectional category assigned to the Unicode character *unichr* as
+   Returns the bidirectional category assigned to the character *chr* as
    string. If no such value is defined, an empty string is returned.
 
 
-.. function:: combining(unichr)
+.. function:: combining(chr)
 
-   Returns the canonical combining class assigned to the Unicode character *unichr*
+   Returns the canonical combining class assigned to the character *chr*
    as integer. Returns ``0`` if no combining class is defined.
 
 
-.. function:: east_asian_width(unichr)
+.. function:: east_asian_width(chr)
 
-   Returns the east asian width assigned to the Unicode character *unichr* as
+   Returns the east asian width assigned to the character *chr* as
    string.
 
 
-.. function:: mirrored(unichr)
+.. function:: mirrored(chr)
 
-   Returns the mirrored property assigned to the Unicode character *unichr* as
+   Returns the mirrored property assigned to the character *chr* as
    integer. Returns ``1`` if the character has been identified as a "mirrored"
    character in bidirectional text, ``0`` otherwise.
 
 
-.. function:: decomposition(unichr)
+.. function:: decomposition(chr)
 
-   Returns the character decomposition mapping assigned to the Unicode character
-   *unichr* as string. An empty string is returned in case no such mapping is
+   Returns the character decomposition mapping assigned to the character
+   *chr* as string. An empty string is returned in case no such mapping is
    defined.
 
 
@@ -146,16 +146,16 @@
 
    >>> unicodedata.lookup('LEFT CURLY BRACKET')
    u'{'
-   >>> unicodedata.name(u'/')
+   >>> unicodedata.name('/')
    'SOLIDUS'
-   >>> unicodedata.decimal(u'9')
+   >>> unicodedata.decimal('9')
    9
-   >>> unicodedata.decimal(u'a')
+   >>> unicodedata.decimal('a')
    Traceback (most recent call last):
      File "<stdin>", line 1, in ?
    ValueError: not a decimal
-   >>> unicodedata.category(u'A')  # 'L'etter, 'u'ppercase
+   >>> unicodedata.category('A')  # 'L'etter, 'u'ppercase
    'Lu'   
-   >>> unicodedata.bidirectional(u'\u0660') # 'A'rabic, 'N'umber
+   >>> unicodedata.bidirectional('\u0660') # 'A'rabic, 'N'umber
    'AN'
 

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/userdict.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/userdict.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/userdict.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -146,7 +146,7 @@
 behaviors to strings.
 
 It should be noted that these classes are highly inefficient compared to real
-string or Unicode objects; this is especially the case for
+string or bytes objects; this is especially the case for
 :class:`MutableString`.
 
 The :mod:`UserString` module defines the following classes:
@@ -158,9 +158,9 @@
    content is kept in a regular string or Unicode string object, which is
    accessible via the :attr:`data` attribute of :class:`UserString` instances.  The
    instance's contents are initially set to a copy of *sequence*.  *sequence* can
-   be either a regular Python string or Unicode string, an instance of
-   :class:`UserString` (or a subclass) or an arbitrary sequence which can be
-   converted into a string using the built-in :func:`str` function.
+   be an instance of :class:`bytes`, :class:`str`, :class:`UserString` (or a
+   subclass) or an arbitrary sequence which can be converted into a string using
+   the built-in :func:`str` function.
 
 
 .. class:: MutableString([sequence])
@@ -173,13 +173,13 @@
    mutable object as dictionary key, which would be otherwise very error prone and
    hard to track down.
 
-In addition to supporting the methods and operations of string and Unicode
+In addition to supporting the methods and operations of bytes and string
 objects (see section :ref:`string-methods`), :class:`UserString` instances
 provide the following attribute:
 
 
 .. attribute:: MutableString.data
 
-   A real Python string or Unicode object used to store the content of the
+   A real Python string or bytes object used to store the content of the
    :class:`UserString` class.
 

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/wsgiref.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/wsgiref.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/wsgiref.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -169,7 +169,7 @@
       wrapper = FileWrapper(filelike, blksize=5)
 
       for chunk in wrapper: 
-          print chunk
+          print(chunk)
 
 
 
@@ -428,7 +428,7 @@
       validator_app = validator(simple_app)
 
       httpd = make_server('', 8000, validator_app)
-      print "Listening on port 8000...."
+      print("Listening on port 8000....")
       httpd.serve_forever()
 
 
@@ -720,7 +720,7 @@
        return ["Hello World"]
 
    httpd = make_server('', 8000, hello_world_app)
-   print "Serving on port 8000..."
+   print("Serving on port 8000...")
 
    # Serve until process is killed
    httpd.serve_forever()

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/xml.dom.minidom.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/xml.dom.minidom.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/xml.dom.minidom.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -147,10 +147,10 @@
    document. Encoding this string in an encoding other than UTF-8 is likely
    incorrect, since UTF-8 is the default encoding of XML.
 
-   With an explicit *encoding* argument, the result is a byte string in the
-   specified encoding. It is recommended that this argument is always specified. To
-   avoid :exc:`UnicodeError` exceptions in case of unrepresentable text data, the
-   encoding argument should be specified as "utf-8".
+   With an explicit *encoding* argument, the result is a :class:`bytes` object
+   in the specified encoding. It is recommended that this argument is always
+   specified. To avoid :exc:`UnicodeError` exceptions in case of unrepresentable
+   text data, the encoding argument should be specified as "utf-8".
 
 
 .. method:: Node.toprettyxml([indent[, newl[, encoding]]])
@@ -212,7 +212,7 @@
   ``boolean`` all map to Python integer objects.
 
 * The type ``DOMString`` maps to Python strings. :mod:`xml.dom.minidom` supports
-  either byte or Unicode strings, but will normally produce Unicode strings.
+  either bytes or strings, but will normally produce strings.
   Values of type ``DOMString`` may also be ``None`` where allowed to have the IDL
   ``null`` value by the DOM specification from the W3C.
 

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/xml.dom.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/xml.dom.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/xml.dom.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -985,7 +985,7 @@
 +------------------+-------------------------------------------+
 
 Additionally, the :class:`DOMString` defined in the recommendation is mapped to
-a Python string or Unicode string.  Applications should be able to handle
+a bytes or string object.  Applications should be able to handle
 Unicode whenever a string is returned from the DOM.
 
 The IDL ``null`` value is mapped to ``None``, which may be accepted or

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/xml.etree.elementtree.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/xml.etree.elementtree.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/xml.etree.elementtree.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -43,10 +43,11 @@
 
 .. function:: Comment([text])
 
-   Comment element factory.  This factory function creates a special element that
-   will be serialized as an XML comment. The comment string can be either an 8-bit
-   ASCII string or a Unicode string. *text* is a string containing the comment
-   string. Returns an element instance representing a comment.
+   Comment element factory.  This factory function creates a special element
+   that will be serialized as an XML comment. The comment string can be either
+   an ASCII-only :class:`bytes` object or a :class:`str` object. *text* is a
+   string containing the comment string. Returns an element instance
+   representing a comment.
 
 
 .. function:: dump(elem)
@@ -67,10 +68,11 @@
    dependent, but it will always be compatible with the _ElementInterface class in
    this module.
 
-   The element name, attribute names, and attribute values can be either 8-bit
-   ASCII strings or Unicode strings. *tag* is the element name. *attrib* is an
-   optional dictionary, containing element attributes. *extra* contains additional
-   attributes, given as keyword arguments. Returns an element instance.
+   The element name, attribute names, and attribute values can be either an
+   ASCII-only :class:`bytes` object or a :class:`str` object. *tag* is the
+   element name. *attrib* is an optional dictionary, containing element
+   attributes. *extra* contains additional attributes, given as keyword
+   arguments. Returns an element instance.
 
 
 .. function:: fromstring(text)
@@ -114,11 +116,11 @@
    Subelement factory.  This function creates an element instance, and appends it
    to an existing element.
 
-   The element name, attribute names, and attribute values can be either 8-bit
-   ASCII strings or Unicode strings. *parent* is the parent element. *tag* is the
-   subelement name. *attrib* is an optional dictionary, containing element
-   attributes. *extra* contains additional attributes, given as keyword arguments.
-   Returns an element instance.
+   The element name, attribute names, and attribute values can be an ASCII-only
+   :class:`bytes` object or a :class:`str` object. *parent* is the parent
+   element. *tag* is the subelement name. *attrib* is an optional dictionary,
+   containing element attributes. *extra* contains additional attributes, given
+   as keyword arguments. Returns an element instance.
 
 
 .. function:: tostring(element[, encoding])
@@ -275,7 +277,7 @@
 with subelements: :meth:`__delitem__`, :meth:`__getitem__`, :meth:`__setitem__`,
 :meth:`__len__`.
 
-Caution: Because Element objects do not define a :meth:`__nonzero__` method,
+Caution: Because Element objects do not define a :meth:`__bool__` method,
 elements with no subelements will test as ``False``. ::
 
    element = root.find('foo')
@@ -426,7 +428,7 @@
 .. method:: TreeBuilder.data(data)
 
    Adds text to the current element. *data* is a string.  This should be either an
-   8-bit string containing ASCII text, or a Unicode string.
+   ASCII-only :class:`bytes` object or a :class:`str` object.
 
 
 .. method:: TreeBuilder.end(tag)

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/xml.sax.handler.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/xml.sax.handler.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/xml.sax.handler.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -281,8 +281,8 @@
    must come from the same external entity so that the Locator provides useful
    information.
 
-   *content* may be a Unicode string or a byte string; the ``expat`` reader module
-   produces always Unicode strings.
+   *content* may be a string or bytes instance; the ``expat`` reader module
+   always produces strings.
 
    .. note::
 

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/xml.sax.reader.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/xml.sax.reader.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/xml.sax.reader.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -307,7 +307,7 @@
 .. method:: InputSource.setCharacterStream(charfile)
 
    Set the character stream for this input source. (The stream must be a Python 1.6
-   Unicode-wrapped file-like that performs conversion to Unicode strings.)
+   Unicode-wrapped file-like that performs conversion to strings.)
 
    If there is a character stream specified, the SAX parser will ignore any byte
    stream and will not attempt to open a URI connection to the system identifier.

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/xmlrpclib.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/xmlrpclib.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/library/xmlrpclib.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -194,7 +194,7 @@
        return n%2 == 0
 
    server = SimpleXMLRPCServer(("localhost", 8000))
-   print "Listening on port 8000..."
+   print("Listening on port 8000...")
    server.register_function(is_even, "is_even")
    server.serve_forever()
 
@@ -203,8 +203,8 @@
    import xmlrpclib
 
    proxy = xmlrpclib.ServerProxy("http://localhost:8000/")
-   print "3 is even: %s" % str(proxy.is_even(3))
-   print "100 is even: %s" % str(proxy.is_even(100))
+   print("3 is even: %s" % str(proxy.is_even(3)))
+   print("100 is even: %s" % str(proxy.is_even(100)))
 
 .. _datetime-objects:
 
@@ -241,7 +241,7 @@
        return xmlrpclib.DateTime(today)
 
    server = SimpleXMLRPCServer(("localhost", 8000))
-   print "Listening on port 8000..."
+   print("Listening on port 8000...")
    server.register_function(today, "today")
    server.serve_forever()
 
@@ -255,7 +255,7 @@
    today = proxy.today()
    # convert the ISO8601 string to a datetime object
    converted = datetime.datetime.strptime(today.value, "%Y%m%dT%H:%M:%S")
-   print "Today: %s" % converted.strftime("%d.%m.%Y, %H:%M")
+   print("Today: %s" % converted.strftime("%d.%m.%Y, %H:%M"))
 
 .. _binary-objects:
 
@@ -300,7 +300,7 @@
         handle.close()
 
    server = SimpleXMLRPCServer(("localhost", 8000))
-   print "Listening on port 8000..."
+   print("Listening on port 8000...")
    server.register_function(python_logo, 'python_logo')
 
    server.serve_forever()
@@ -343,7 +343,7 @@
        return x+y+0j
 
    server = SimpleXMLRPCServer(("localhost", 8000))
-   print "Listening on port 8000..."
+   print("Listening on port 8000...")
    server.register_function(add, 'add')
 
    server.serve_forever()
@@ -356,9 +356,9 @@
    try:
        proxy.add(2, 5)
    except xmlrpclib.Fault, err:
-       print "A fault occured"
-       print "Fault code: %d" % err.faultCode
-       print "Fault string: %s" % err.faultString
+       print("A fault occured")
+       print("Fault code: %d" % err.faultCode)
+       print("Fault string: %s" % err.faultString)
 
 
 
@@ -403,11 +403,11 @@
    try:
        proxy.some_method()
    except xmlrpclib.ProtocolError, err:
-       print "A protocol error occured"
-       print "URL: %s" % err.url
-       print "HTTP/HTTPS headers: %s" % err.headers
-       print "Error code: %d" % err.errcode
-       print "Error message: %s" % err.errmsg
+       print("A protocol error occured")
+       print("URL: %s" % err.url)
+       print("HTTP/HTTPS headers: %s" % err.headers)
+       print("Error code: %d" % err.errcode)
+       print("Error message: %s" % err.errmsg)
 
 MultiCall Objects
 -----------------
@@ -444,7 +444,7 @@
 
    # A simple server with simple arithmetic functions
    server = SimpleXMLRPCServer(("localhost", 8000))
-   print "Listening on port 8000..."
+   print("Listening on port 8000...")
    server.register_multicall_functions()
    server.register_function(add, 'add')
    server.register_function(subtract, 'subtract')
@@ -464,7 +464,7 @@
    multicall.divide(7,3)
    result = multicall()
 
-   print "7+3=%d, 7-3=%d, 7*3=%d, 7/3=%d" % tuple(result)
+   print("7+3=%d, 7-3=%d, 7*3=%d, 7/3=%d" % tuple(result))
 
 
 Convenience Functions

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/reference/datamodel.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/reference/datamodel.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/reference/datamodel.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -901,7 +901,6 @@
          pair: exception; handler
          pair: execution; stack
          single: exc_info (in module sys)
-         single: exc_traceback (in module sys)
          single: last_traceback (in module sys)
          single: sys.exc_info
          single: sys.last_traceback

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/tutorial/classes.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/tutorial/classes.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/tutorial/classes.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -811,7 +811,7 @@
    260
 
    >>> from math import pi, sin
-   >>> sine_table = dict((x, sin(x*pi/180)) for x in range(0, 91))
+   >>> sine_table = {x: sin(x*pi/180) for x in range(0, 91)}
 
    >>> unique_words = set(word  for line in page  for word in line.split())
 

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/tutorial/datastructures.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/tutorial/datastructures.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/tutorial/datastructures.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -273,7 +273,7 @@
 
 List comprehensions can be applied to complex expressions and nested functions::
 
-   >>> [str(round(355/113.0, i)) for i in range(1, 6)]
+   >>> [str(round(355/113, i)) for i in range(1, 6)]
    ['3.1', '3.14', '3.142', '3.1416', '3.14159']
 
 
@@ -437,6 +437,9 @@
    >>> fruit = set(basket)               # create a set without duplicates
    >>> fruit
    {'orange', 'pear', 'apple', 'banana'}
+   >>> fruit = {'orange', 'apple'}       # {} syntax is equivalent to [] for lists
+   >>> fruit
+   {'orange', 'apple'}
    >>> 'orange' in fruit                 # fast membership testing
    True
    >>> 'crabgrass' in fruit
@@ -457,6 +460,11 @@
    >>> a ^ b                              # letters in a or b but not both
    {'r', 'd', 'b', 'm', 'z', 'l'}
 
+Like for lists, there is a set comprehension syntax::
+
+   >>> a = {x for x in 'abracadabra' if x not in 'abc'}
+   >>> a
+   {'r', 'd'}
 
 
 
@@ -518,12 +526,12 @@
 
    >>> dict([('sape', 4139), ('guido', 4127), ('jack', 4098)])
    {'sape': 4139, 'jack': 4098, 'guido': 4127}
-   >>> dict([(x, x**2) for x in (2, 4, 6)])     # use a list comprehension
-   {2: 4, 4: 16, 6: 36}
 
-Later in the tutorial, we will learn about Generator Expressions which are even
-better suited for the task of supplying key-values pairs to the :func:`dict`
-constructor.
+In addition, dict comprehensions can be used to create dictionaries from
+arbitrary key and value expressions::
+
+   >>> {x: x**2 for x in (2, 4, 6)}
+   {2: 4, 4: 16, 6: 36}
 
 When the keys are simple strings, it is sometimes easier to specify pairs using
 keyword arguments::
@@ -532,9 +540,8 @@
    {'sape': 4139, 'jack': 4098, 'guido': 4127}
 
 
+.. XXX Find out the right way to do these DUBOIS
 .. _tut-loopidioms:
-.. % 
-   Find out the right way to do these DUBOIS
 
 Looping Techniques
 ==================

Modified: python/branches/py3k/Doc/tutorial/stdlib.rst
==============================================================================
--- python/branches/py3k/Doc/tutorial/stdlib.rst	(original)
+++ python/branches/py3k/Doc/tutorial/stdlib.rst	Fri Feb  1 12:56:49 2008
@@ -121,7 +121,7 @@
 floating point math::
 
    >>> import math
-   >>> math.cos(math.pi / 4.0)
+   >>> math.cos(math.pi / 4)
    0.70710678118654757
    >>> math.log(1024, 2)
    10.0
@@ -264,7 +264,7 @@
        >>> print(average([20, 30, 70]))
        40.0
        """
-       return sum(values, 0.0) / len(values)
+       return sum(values) / len(values)
 
    import doctest
    doctest.testmod()   # automatically validate the embedded tests


More information about the Python-3000-checkins mailing list