332 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
332 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
Metadata-Version: 2.0
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Name: configparser
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Version: 3.5.0
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Summary: This library brings the updated configparser from Python 3.5 to Python 2.6-3.5.
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Home-page: http://docs.python.org/3/library/configparser.html
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Author: Lukasz Langa
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Author-email: lukasz@langa.pl
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License: MIT
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Description-Content-Type: UNKNOWN
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Keywords: configparser ini parsing conf cfg configuration file
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Platform: any
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Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable
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Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
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Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
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Classifier: Natural Language :: English
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Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2.6
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2.7
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.4
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.5
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Classifier: Topic :: Software Development :: Libraries
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Classifier: Topic :: Software Development :: Libraries :: Python Modules
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============
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configparser
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============
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The ancient ``ConfigParser`` module available in the standard library 2.x has
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seen a major update in Python 3.2. This is a backport of those changes so that
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they can be used directly in Python 2.6 - 3.5.
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To use the ``configparser`` backport instead of the built-in version on both
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Python 2 and Python 3, simply import it explicitly as a backport::
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from backports import configparser
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If you'd like to use the backport on Python 2 and the built-in version on
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Python 3, use that invocation instead::
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import configparser
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For detailed documentation consult the vanilla version at
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http://docs.python.org/3/library/configparser.html.
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Why you'll love ``configparser``
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--------------------------------
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Whereas almost completely compatible with its older brother, ``configparser``
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sports a bunch of interesting new features:
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* full mapping protocol access (`more info
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<http://docs.python.org/3/library/configparser.html#mapping-protocol-access>`_)::
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>>> parser = ConfigParser()
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>>> parser.read_string("""
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[DEFAULT]
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location = upper left
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visible = yes
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editable = no
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color = blue
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[main]
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title = Main Menu
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color = green
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[options]
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title = Options
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""")
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>>> parser['main']['color']
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'green'
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>>> parser['main']['editable']
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'no'
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>>> section = parser['options']
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>>> section['title']
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'Options'
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>>> section['title'] = 'Options (editable: %(editable)s)'
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>>> section['title']
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'Options (editable: no)'
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* there's now one default ``ConfigParser`` class, which basically is the old
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``SafeConfigParser`` with a bunch of tweaks which make it more predictable for
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users. Don't need interpolation? Simply use
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``ConfigParser(interpolation=None)``, no need to use a distinct
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``RawConfigParser`` anymore.
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* the parser is highly `customizable upon instantiation
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<http://docs.python.org/3/library/configparser.html#customizing-parser-behaviour>`__
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supporting things like changing option delimiters, comment characters, the
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name of the DEFAULT section, the interpolation syntax, etc.
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* you can easily create your own interpolation syntax but there are two powerful
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implementations built-in (`more info
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<http://docs.python.org/3/library/configparser.html#interpolation-of-values>`__):
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* the classic ``%(string-like)s`` syntax (called ``BasicInterpolation``)
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* a new ``${buildout:like}`` syntax (called ``ExtendedInterpolation``)
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* fallback values may be specified in getters (`more info
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<http://docs.python.org/3/library/configparser.html#fallback-values>`__)::
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>>> config.get('closet', 'monster',
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... fallback='No such things as monsters')
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'No such things as monsters'
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* ``ConfigParser`` objects can now read data directly `from strings
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<http://docs.python.org/3/library/configparser.html#configparser.ConfigParser.read_string>`__
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and `from dictionaries
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<http://docs.python.org/3/library/configparser.html#configparser.ConfigParser.read_dict>`__.
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That means importing configuration from JSON or specifying default values for
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the whole configuration (multiple sections) is now a single line of code. Same
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goes for copying data from another ``ConfigParser`` instance, thanks to its
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mapping protocol support.
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* many smaller tweaks, updates and fixes
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A few words about Unicode
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-------------------------
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``configparser`` comes from Python 3 and as such it works well with Unicode.
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The library is generally cleaned up in terms of internal data storage and
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reading/writing files. There are a couple of incompatibilities with the old
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``ConfigParser`` due to that. However, the work required to migrate is well
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worth it as it shows the issues that would likely come up during migration of
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your project to Python 3.
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The design assumes that Unicode strings are used whenever possible [1]_. That
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gives you the certainty that what's stored in a configuration object is text.
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Once your configuration is read, the rest of your application doesn't have to
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deal with encoding issues. All you have is text [2]_. The only two phases when
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you should explicitly state encoding is when you either read from an external
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source (e.g. a file) or write back.
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Versioning
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----------
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This backport is intended to keep 100% compatibility with the vanilla release in
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Python 3.2+. To help maintaining a version you want and expect, a versioning
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scheme is used where:
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* the first two numbers indicate the version of Python 3 from which the
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backport is done
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* a backport release number is provided as the final number (zero-indexed)
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For example, ``3.5.2`` is the **third** backport release of the
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``configparser`` library as seen in Python 3.5. Note that ``3.5.2`` does
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**NOT** necessarily mean this backport version is based on the standard library
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of Python 3.5.2.
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One exception from the 100% compatibility principle is that bugs fixed before
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releasing another minor Python 3 bugfix version **will be included** in the
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backport releases done in the mean time.
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Maintenance
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-----------
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This backport is maintained on BitBucket by Łukasz Langa, the current vanilla
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``configparser`` maintainer for CPython:
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* `configparser Mercurial repository <https://bitbucket.org/ambv/configparser>`_
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* `configparser issue tracker <https://bitbucket.org/ambv/configparser/issues>`_
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Change Log
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----------
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3.5.0
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~~~~~
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* a complete rewrite of the backport; now single codebase working on Python
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2.6 - 3.5. To use on Python 3 import ``from backports import configparser``
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instead of the built-in version.
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* compatible with 3.5.1
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* fixes `BitBucket issue #1
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<https://bitbucket.org/ambv/configparser/issue/1>`_: versioning non-compliant
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with PEP 386
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* fixes `BitBucket issue #3
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<https://bitbucket.org/ambv/configparser/issue/3>`_: ``reload(sys);
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sys.setdefaultencoding('utf8')`` in setup.py
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* fixes `BitBucket issue #5
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<https://bitbucket.org/ambv/configparser/issue/5>`_: Installing the backport
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on Python 3 breaks virtualenv
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* fixes `BitBucket issue #6
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<https://bitbucket.org/ambv/configparser/issue/6>`_: PyPy compatibility
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3.5.0b2
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~~~~~~~
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* second beta of 3.5.0, not using any third-party futurization libraries
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3.5.0b1
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~~~~~~~
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* first beta of 3.5.0, using python-future
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* for the full feature list, see `3.5.0`_
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3.3.0r2
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~~~~~~~
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* updated the fix for `#16820 <http://bugs.python.org/issue16820>`_: parsers
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now preserve section order when using ``__setitem__`` and ``update``
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3.3.0r1
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~~~~~~~
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* compatible with 3.3.0 + fixes for `#15803
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<http://bugs.python.org/issue15803>`_ and `#16820
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<http://bugs.python.org/issue16820>`_
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* fixes `BitBucket issue #4
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<https://bitbucket.org/ambv/configparser/issue/4>`_: ``read()`` properly
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treats a bytestring argument as a filename
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* `ordereddict <http://pypi.python.org/pypi/ordereddict>`_ dependency required
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only for Python 2.6
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* `unittest2 <http://pypi.python.org/pypi/unittest2>`_ explicit dependency
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dropped. If you want to test the release, add ``unittest2`` on your own.
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3.2.0r3
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~~~~~~~
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* proper Python 2.6 support
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* explicitly stated the dependency on `ordereddict
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<http://pypi.python.org/pypi/ordereddict>`_
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* numbered all formatting braces in strings
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* explicitly says that Python 2.5 support won't happen (too much work necessary
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without abstract base classes, string formatters, the ``io`` library, etc.)
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* some healthy advertising in the README
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3.2.0r2
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~~~~~~~
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* a backport-specific change: for convenience and basic compatibility with the
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old ConfigParser, bytestrings are now accepted as section names, options and
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values. Those strings are still converted to Unicode for internal storage so
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in any case when such conversion is not possible (using the 'ascii' codec),
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UnicodeDecodeError is raised.
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3.2.0r1
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~~~~~~~
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* the first public release compatible with 3.2.0 + fixes for `#11324
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<http://bugs.python.org/issue11324>`_, `#11670
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<http://bugs.python.org/issue11670>`_ and `#11858
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<http://bugs.python.org/issue11858>`_.
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Conversion Process
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------------------
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This section is technical and should bother you only if you are wondering how
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this backport is produced. If the implementation details of this backport are
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not important for you, feel free to ignore the following content.
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``configparser`` is converted using `python-future
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<http://python-future.org>`_ and free time. Because a fully automatic
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conversion was not doable, I took the following branching approach:
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* the ``3.x`` branch holds unchanged files synchronized from the upstream
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CPython repository. The synchronization is currently done by manually copying
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the required files and stating from which CPython changeset they come from.
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* the ``default`` branch holds a version of the ``3.x`` code with some tweaks
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that make it independent from libraries and constructions unavailable on 2.x.
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Code on this branch still *must* work on the corresponding Python 3.x but
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will also work on Python 2.6 and 2.7 (including PyPy). You can check this
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running the supplied unit tests with ``tox``.
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The process works like this:
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1. I update the ``3.x`` branch with new versions of files. Note that the
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actual ``configparser.py`` file is now just a proxy for sources held in
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``backports/configparser/__init__.py``.
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2. I check for new names in ``__all__`` and update imports in
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``configparser.py`` accordingly. I run the tests on Python 3. Commit.
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3. I merge the new commit to ``default``. I run ``tox``. Commit.
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4. If there are necessary changes, I do them now (on ``default``). Note that
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the changes should be written in the syntax subset supported by Python
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2.6.
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5. I run ``tox``. If it works, I update the docs and release the new version.
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Otherwise, I go back to point 3. I might use ``pasteurize`` to suggest me
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required changes but usually I do them manually to keep resulting code in
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a nicer form.
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Footnotes
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---------
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.. [1] To somewhat ease migration, passing bytestrings is still supported but
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they are converted to Unicode for internal storage anyway. This means
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that for the vast majority of strings used in configuration files, it
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won't matter if you pass them as bytestrings or Unicode. However, if you
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pass a bytestring that cannot be converted to Unicode using the naive
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ASCII codec, a ``UnicodeDecodeError`` will be raised. This is purposeful
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and helps you manage proper encoding for all content you store in
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memory, read from various sources and write back.
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.. [2] Life gets much easier when you understand that you basically manage
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**text** in your application. You don't care about bytes but about
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letters. In that regard the concept of content encoding is meaningless.
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The only time when you deal with raw bytes is when you write the data to
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a file. Then you have to specify how your text should be encoded. On
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the other end, to get meaningful text from a file, the application
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reading it has to know which encoding was used during its creation. But
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once the bytes are read and properly decoded, all you have is text. This
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is especially powerful when you start interacting with multiple data
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sources. Even if each of them uses a different encoding, inside your
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application data is held in abstract text form. You can program your
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business logic without worrying about which data came from which source.
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You can freely exchange the data you store between sources. Only
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reading/writing files requires encoding your text to bytes.
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