Python 2.7 有什么新变化
***********************

作者:
   A.M. Kuchling (amk at amk.ca)

本文介绍了Python 2.7 的新功能。 Python 2.7 于2010年7月3日发布。

数字处理在许多方面得到了改进，包括浮点数和 "Decimal" 类。标准库中有一
些有用的补充，例如大大增强的 "unittest" 模块，用于解析命令行选项的
"argparse" 模块，在 "collections" 模块中方便的 "OrderedDict" 和
"Counter" 类，以及许多其他改进。

Python 2.7计划成为2.x版本的最后一个发布版本，因此我们努力使其成为长期
支持的好版本。为了帮助迁移到Python 3，我们在2.7中包含了几个来自Python
3.x系列的新特性。

本文并不试图提供新特性的完整规范说明，而是提供一个方便的概览。要了解完
整的细节，请参阅Python 2.7的文档。如果你想了解有关设计和实现的具体考量
，请参阅特定新特性的PEP或在https://bugs.python.org上讨论更改的问题。在
可能的情况下，“What's New in Python”链接到每个更改的错误修正/补丁项。


Python 2.x的未来
================

Python 2.7 是 2.x 系列中的最后一个主版本，因为Python 维护人员已将新功
能开发工作的重点转移到了 Python 3.x 系列中。这意味着，尽管 Python 2 会
继续修复bug并更新，以便在新的硬件和支持操作系统版本上正确构建，但不会
有新的功能发布。

然而，尽管在 Python 2.7 和 Python 3 之间有一个很大的公共子集，并且迁移
到该公共子集或直接迁移到 Python 3 所涉及的许多更改可以安全地自动化完成
。但是一些其他更改（特别是那些与Unicode处理相关的更改）可能需要仔细考
虑，并且最好用自动化回归测试套件进行健壮性测试，以便有效地迁移。

这意味着 Python2.7 将长期保留，为尚未移植到 Python 3 的生产系统提供一
个稳定且受支持的基础平台。Python 2.7系列的预期完整生命周期在 **PEP
373** 中有详细介绍。

长期保留 2.7 版的的一些关键后果：

* 如上所述，与早期的2.x版本相比，2.7版本的维护时间更长。目前，预计核心
  开发团队将继续支持Python 2.7（接收安全更新和其他错误修复），直到至少
  2020年（首次发布后10年，相比之下，通常的支持期为18--24个月）。

* 随着 Python 2.7 标准库的老化，有效地利用 Python 包索引（直接或通过重
  新分发者）对 Python 2 用户来说变得更加重要。除了各种任务的第三方包之
  外，可用的包还包括与 Python 2 兼容的 Python 3 标准库中的新模块和功能
  的后端移植，以及各种工具和库，这些工具和库可以让用户更容易迁移到
  Python 3。 Python 包用户指南 提供了从 Python 包索引的下载和安装软件
  的指导。

* 虽然现在增强 Python 2 的首选方法是在Python包索引上发布新包，但这种方
  法不一定适用于所有情况，尤其是与网络安全相关的情况。在一些特殊情况下
  ，如果在PyPI上发布新的或更新的包无法得到充分的处理，则可以使用Python
  增强建议过程来提出直接在Python 2标准库中添加新功能。任何此类添加及其
  添加的维护版本将在下面的 New Features Added to Python 2.7
  Maintenance Releases 部分中注明。

对于希望从 Python2 迁移到 Python3 的项目，或者对于希望同时支持 Python2
和 Python3 用户的库和框架开发人员，可以使用各种工具和指南来帮助决定合
适的方法并管理所涉及的一些技术细节。建议从 如何将 Python 2 代码移植到
Python 3 操作指南开始。


对于弃用警告处理方式的改变
==========================

对于 Python 2.7，一个策略决定是默认情况下禁止只对开发人员有兴趣的警告
。 现在，除非另有要求，否则将忽略 "DeprecationWarning" 及其子类，以防
止用户看到应用程序触发的警告。 这个更改也在成为Python 3.2 的分歧点上进
行了。 （在 stdlib-sig 上进行了讨论，并在 bpo-7319 中执行。）

在以前的版本中，默认情况下启用了 "DeprecationWarning" 消息，为 Python
开发人员提供了一个明确的指示，说明他们的代码可能在未来的 Python 主要版
本中出现问题。

然而，越来越多基于 Python 的应用程序的用户并不直接参与这些应用程序的开
发。 "DeprecationWarning" 消息与这些用户无关，这让他们担心应用能否真正
正常工作，并让应用开发人员承担起回应这些担忧的负担。

显示通过使用 "-Wdefault" (简写: "-Wd") 开关运行 Python，或者在运行
Python 之前将 "PYTHONWARNINGS" 环境变量设置为 ""default"" (或 ""d"")，
可以重新启用 "DeprecationWarning" 消息。 Python 代码也可以通过调用
"warnings.simplefilter('default')" 重新启用它们。

"unittest" 模块还会在运行测试时自动重新启用弃用警告。


Python 3.1 特性
===============

就像 Python2.6 集成了 Python3.0 的特性一样，2.7版也集成了 Python3.1 中
的一些新特性。2.x 系列继续提供迁移到3.x系列的工具。

3.1 功能的部分列表，这些功能已反向移植到 2.7：

* 用于集合字面值的语法 ("{1,2,3}" 是一个可变集合)。

* 字典与集合推导式 ("{i: i*2 for i in range(3)}")。

* 单个 "with" 语句中使用多个上下文管理器。

* 一个 "io" 库的新版本，用 C 重写以提升性能。

* PEP 372：将有序字典 添加到收藏集 所描述的有序字典类型。

* PEP 378: 千位分隔符的格式说明符 所描述的新的 "","" 格式说明符。

* "memoryview" 对象。

* "importlib" 模块的一个较小子集，described below。

* 在很多情况下，浮点数 "x" 的 "repr()" 更短：现在它基于最短的十进制字
  符串 ，保证四舍五入到 "x"。  与 Python 以前的版本一样，保证
  "float(repr(x))" 能恢复到 "x"。

* 浮点数到字符串和字符串到浮点数的转换已正确舍入。 "round()" 函数现在
  也能正确舍入。

* "PyCapsule" 类型，用于为扩展模块提供 C API 。

* "PyLong_AsLongAndOverflow()" C API 函数 。

其他新的 Python3 模式警告包括：

* "operator.isCallable()" 和 "operator.sequenceIncludes()" 在 3.x 中不
  支持，现在会触发警告。

* "-3" 开关现在会自动启用:option:*!-Qwarn* 开关，该开关会在使用经典整
  除法处理整数和长整数时发出警告。


PEP 372：将有序字典 添加到收藏集
================================

常规 Python 字典以任意顺序遍历键/值对。 多年来，许多作者编写了替代实现
，以记住键最初插入的顺序。 基于这些实现的经验，2.7 在 "collections" 模
块中引入了一个新的 "OrderedDict" 类。

"OrderedDict" API 提供与普通字典相同的接口 ，但会根据键首次插入的时间
，按一定顺序遍历键和值：：

   >>> from collections import OrderedDict
   >>> d = OrderedDict([('first', 1),
   ...                  ('second', 2),
   ...                  ('third', 3)])
   >>> d.items()
   [('first', 1), ('second', 2), ('third', 3)]

如果新条目覆盖了现有条目，则原插入位置保持不变

   >>> d['second'] = 4
   >>> d.items()
   [('first', 1), ('second', 4), ('third', 3)]

删除条目并重新插入会将其移至末尾

   >>> del d['second']
   >>> d['second'] = 5
   >>> d.items()
   [('first', 1), ('third', 3), ('second', 5)]

"popitem()" 方法有一个可选 *last* 参数 ，默认为 "True" 。如果 *last*
为真 ，则返回并删除最近添加的密钥；如果为 false ，则选择最旧的密钥

   >>> od = OrderedDict([(x,0) for x in range(20)])
   >>> od.popitem()
   (19, 0)
   >>> od.popitem()
   (18, 0)
   >>> od.popitem(last=False)
   (0, 0)
   >>> od.popitem(last=False)
   (1, 0)

比较两个有序字典会同时检查键和值，并要求插入顺序相同

   >>> od1 = OrderedDict([('first', 1),
   ...                    ('second', 2),
   ...                    ('third', 3)])
   >>> od2 = OrderedDict([('third', 3),
   ...                    ('first', 1),
   ...                    ('second', 2)])
   >>> od1 == od2
   False
   >>> # Move 'third' key to the end
   >>> del od2['third']; od2['third'] = 3
   >>> od1 == od2
   True

将 "OrderedDict" 与普通字典进行比较时，会忽略插入顺序，只比较键和值。

"OrderedDict" 是如何工作的？它维护一个键的双链路列表，在插入新键时将其
添加到列表中。二级字典 将键映射到其对应的列表节点 ，因此删除时不必遍历
整个链接列表，从而保持 *O*(1)。

现在，标准库支持在多个模块 中使用有序字典。

* "ConfigParser" 模块默认使用它们，这意味着现在可以按照原来的顺序读取
  、修改和写回配置文件。

* "collections.namedtuple()" 的 "_asdict()" 方法现在会返回一个有序字典
  ，其值的出现顺序与底层元组的索引相同。

* "json" 模块的 "JSONDecoder" 类构造器扩展了一个 *object_pairs_hook*
  形参 ，允许解码器构建 "OrderedDict" 实例。此外，还添加了对第三方工具
  的支持，如 PyYAML 。

参见:

  **PEP 372** - 将有序词典添加到集合中
     PEP 由 Armin Ronacher 和 Raymond Hettinger 撰写，由 Raymond
     Hettinger 实现。


PEP 378: 千位分隔符的格式说明符
===============================

为了使程序输出更易读，可以在大数字上添加分隔符，将其显示为
18,446,744,073,709,551,616 而不是 18446744073709551616。

完全通用的解决方案是 "locale" 模块 ，它可以使用不同的分隔符（北美为","
，欧洲为"."）和不同的分组大小，但 "locale" 使用起来比较复杂，而且不适
合多线程应用程序，因为不同的线程会为不同的本地生成输出。

因此，在 "str.format()" 方法使用的迷你语言中添加了一个简单的逗号分组机
制。 在格式化浮点数时，只需在宽度和精度之间加上逗号

   >>> '{:20,.2f}'.format(18446744073709551616.0)
   '18,446,744,073,709,551,616.00'

格式化整数时，在宽度后面加上逗号：

>>> '{:20,d}'.format(18446744073709551616)
'18,446,744,073,709,551,616'

这种机制完全没有适应性；逗号总是用作分隔符，分组总是以三位数为一组。
逗号格式机制不如 "locale" 模块通用，但使用起来更方便。

参见:

  **PEP 378** - 千位分隔符的格式说明符
     PEP 由 Raymond Hettinger 撰写，由 Eric Smith 实现


PEP 389：用于解析命令行的 argparse 模块
=======================================

用于解析命令-line参数的 "argparse" 模块是作为 "optparse" 模块更强大的
替代功能而添加的。

这意味着 Python 现在支持三个不同的用来解析命令行参数的模块: "getopt",
"optparse" 和 "argparse"。 "getopt" 模块非常接近 C 库的 "getopt()" 函
数，因此它在你编写最终要用 C 来重新编写的 Python 原型代码时很有用处。
"optparse" 已经变得冗余，但并没有移除它的计划因为许多脚本仍然在使用它
，并且也没有自动化更新这些脚本的方式。 （让 "argparse" API 与
"optparse" 的接口保持一致的提议曾被讨论但因过于繁琐和困难而被拒绝。）

简而言之，如果你是在编写新脚本并且不需要担心与 Python 较早版本的兼容性
，请使用 "argparse" 而不是 "optparse"。

以下是为示例代码:

   import argparse

   parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description='Command-line example.')

   # Add optional switches
   parser.add_argument('-v', action='store_true', dest='is_verbose',
                       help='produce verbose output')
   parser.add_argument('-o', action='store', dest='output',
                       metavar='FILE',
                       help='direct output to FILE instead of stdout')
   parser.add_argument('-C', action='store', type=int, dest='context',
                       metavar='NUM', default=0,
                       help='display NUM lines of added context')

   # Allow any number of additional arguments.
   parser.add_argument(nargs='*', action='store', dest='inputs',
                       help='input filenames (default is stdin)')

   args = parser.parse_args()
   print args.__dict__

除非你覆盖它，否则会自动添加 "-h" 和 "--help" 开关，并产生格式化良好的
输出:

   -> ./python.exe argparse-example.py --help
   usage: argparse-example.py [-h] [-v] [-o FILE] [-C NUM] [inputs [inputs ...]]

   Command-line example.

   positional arguments:
     inputs      input filenames (default is stdin)

   optional arguments:
     -h, --help  show this help message and exit
     -v          produce verbose output
     -o FILE     direct output to FILE instead of stdout
     -C NUM      display NUM lines of added context

与 "optparse" 一样，命令行开关和参数将返回为一个具有通过 *dest* 形参所
指定的属性的对象:

   -> ./python.exe argparse-example.py -v
   {'output': None,
    'is_verbose': True,
    'context': 0,
    'inputs': []}

   -> ./python.exe argparse-example.py -v -o /tmp/output -C 4 file1 file2
   {'output': '/tmp/output',
    'is_verbose': True,
    'context': 4,
    'inputs': ['file1', 'file2']}

"argparse" has much fancier validation than "optparse"; you can
specify an exact number of arguments as an integer, 0 or more
arguments by passing "'*'", 1 or more by passing "'+'", or an optional
argument with "'?'".  A top-level parser can contain sub-parsers to
define subcommands that have different sets of switches, as in "svn
commit", "svn checkout", etc.  You can specify an argument's type as
"FileType", which will automatically open files for you and
understands that "'-'" means standard input or output.

参见:

  "argparse" 文档
     argparse 模块的文档页面。

  升级 optparse 代码
     Python 文档的一部分，描述如何转换使用了 "optparse" 的代码。

  **PEP 389** - argparse - 新的命令行解析模块
     PEP 由 Steven Bethard 撰写并实现。


PEP 391: 基于字典的日志配置
===========================

The "logging" module is very flexible; applications can define a tree
of logging subsystems, and each logger in this tree can filter out
certain messages, format them differently, and direct messages to a
varying number of handlers.

All this flexibility can require a lot of configuration.  You can
write Python statements to create objects and set their properties,
but a complex set-up requires verbose but boring code. "logging" also
supports a "fileConfig()" function that parses a file, but the file
format doesn't support configuring filters, and it's messier to
generate programmatically.

Python 2.7 adds a "dictConfig()" function that uses a dictionary to
configure logging.  There are many ways to produce a dictionary from
different sources: construct one with code; parse a file containing
JSON; or use a YAML parsing library if one is installed.  For more
information see 配置函数.

The following example configures two loggers, the root logger and a
logger named "network".  Messages sent to the root logger will be sent
to the system log using the syslog protocol, and messages to the
"network" logger will be written to a "network.log" file that will be
rotated once the log reaches 1MB.

   import logging
   import logging.config

   configdict = {
    'version': 1,    # Configuration schema in use; must be 1 for now
    'formatters': {
        'standard': {
            'format': ('%(asctime)s %(name)-15s '
                       '%(levelname)-8s %(message)s')}},

    'handlers': {'netlog': {'backupCount': 10,
                        'class': 'logging.handlers.RotatingFileHandler',
                        'filename': '/logs/network.log',
                        'formatter': 'standard',
                        'level': 'INFO',
                        'maxBytes': 1000000},
                 'syslog': {'class': 'logging.handlers.SysLogHandler',
                            'formatter': 'standard',
                            'level': 'ERROR'}},

    # Specify all the subordinate loggers
    'loggers': {
                'network': {
                            'handlers': ['netlog']
                }
    },
    # Specify properties of the root logger
    'root': {
             'handlers': ['syslog']
    },
   }

   # Set up configuration
   logging.config.dictConfig(configdict)

   # As an example, log two error messages
   logger = logging.getLogger('/')
   logger.error('Database not found')

   netlogger = logging.getLogger('network')
   netlogger.error('Connection failed')

Three smaller enhancements to the "logging" module, all implemented by
Vinay Sajip, are:

* The "SysLogHandler" class now supports syslogging over TCP.  The
  constructor has a *socktype* parameter giving the type of socket to
  use, either "socket.SOCK_DGRAM" for UDP or "socket.SOCK_STREAM" for
  TCP.  The default protocol remains UDP.

* "Logger" instances gained a "getChild()" method that retrieves a
  descendant logger using a relative path. For example, once you
  retrieve a logger by doing "log = getLogger('app')", calling
  "log.getChild('network.listen')" is equivalent to
  "getLogger('app.network.listen')".

* The "LoggerAdapter" class gained an "isEnabledFor()" method that
  takes a *level* and returns whether the underlying logger would
  process a message of that level of importance.

参见:

  **PEP 391** - 基于字典的日志配置
     PEP 由 Vinay Sajip 撰写并实现


PEP 3106: 字典视图
==================

字典方法 "keys()", "values()", and "items()" 在 Python 3.x 有所不同。
它们将返回名为 *view* 的对象而不是完整的列表。

在 Python 2.7 中不可能改变 "keys()", "values()" 和 "items()" 的返回值
因为那会破坏大量已有代码。 作为替代 3.x 版本是以新名称 "viewkeys()",
"viewvalues()" 和 "viewitems()" 添加的。

   >>> d = dict((i*10, chr(65+i)) for i in range(26))
   >>> d
   {0: 'A', 130: 'N', 10: 'B', 140: 'O', 20: ..., 250: 'Z'}
   >>> d.viewkeys()
   dict_keys([0, 130, 10, 140, 20, 150, 30, ..., 250])

视图可以被迭代，但键和条目视图的行为也很像是集合。 "&" 运算符执行交集
运算，"|" 执行并集运算:

   >>> d1 = dict((i*10, chr(65+i)) for i in range(26))
   >>> d2 = dict((i**.5, i) for i in range(1000))
   >>> d1.viewkeys() & d2.viewkeys()
   set([0.0, 10.0, 20.0, 30.0])
   >>> d1.viewkeys() | range(0, 30)
   set([0, 1, 130, 3, 4, 5, 6, ..., 120, 250])

视图会追踪字典及字典被修改时的内容变化:

   >>> vk = d.viewkeys()
   >>> vk
   dict_keys([0, 130, 10, ..., 250])
   >>> d[260] = '&'
   >>> vk
   dict_keys([0, 130, 260, 10, ..., 250])

但是，请注意在对视图进行迭代时你是不能添加或移除键的:

   >>> for k in vk:
   ...     d[k*2] = k
   ...
   Traceback (most recent call last):
     File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
   RuntimeError: dictionary changed size during iteration

You can use the view methods in Python 2.x code, and the 2to3
converter will change them to the standard "keys()", "values()", and
"items()" methods.

参见:

  **PEP 3106** - 改造 dict.keys(), .values() 和 .items()
     PEP 由 Guido van Rossum 撰写。 由 Alexandre Vassalotti 反向移植到
     2.7； bpo-1967。


PEP 3137: memoryview 对象
=========================

"memoryview" 对象提供与 "bytes" 类型的接口相匹配的另一个对象的内存内容
的视图。

   >>> import string
   >>> m = memoryview(string.letters)
   >>> m
   <memory at 0x37f850>
   >>> len(m)           # Returns length of underlying object
   52
   >>> m[0], m[25], m[26]   # Indexing returns one byte
   ('a', 'z', 'A')
   >>> m2 = m[0:26]         # Slicing returns another memoryview
   >>> m2
   <memory at 0x37f080>

视图的内容可被转换为一个字节串或整数列表：

   >>> m2.tobytes()
   'abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz'
   >>> m2.tolist()
   [97, 98, 99, 100, 101, 102, 103, ... 121, 122]
   >>>

"memoryview" 对象允许对属于可变对象的下层对象进行修改。

   >>> m2[0] = 75
   Traceback (most recent call last):
     File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
   TypeError: cannot modify read-only memory
   >>> b = bytearray(string.letters)  # Creating a mutable object
   >>> b
   bytearray(b'abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ')
   >>> mb = memoryview(b)
   >>> mb[0] = '*'         # Assign to view, changing the bytearray.
   >>> b[0:5]              # The bytearray has been changed.
   bytearray(b'*bcde')
   >>>

参见:

  **PEP 3137** - 不变字节和可变缓冲区
     PEP 由 Guido van Rossum 撰写。 由 Travis Oliphant, Antoine Pitrou
     等人实现。 由 Antoine Pitrou 向下移植到 2.7; bpo-2396。


其他语言特性修改
================

对Python 语言核心进行的小改动：

* 已从 Python 3.x 向下移植了集合字面值语法。 使用花括号来标记可变集合
  的内容；集合与字典的区别在于它不包含冒号及映射的值。 "{}" 仍然表示空
  字典；请使用 "set()" 来表示空集合。

     >>> {1, 2, 3, 4, 5}
     set([1, 2, 3, 4, 5])
     >>> set() # empty set
     set([])
     >>> {}    # empty dict
     {}

  由 Alexandre Vassalotti 向下移植; bpo-2335。

* 字典与集合推导式是另一个从 3.x 向下移植的特性，对列表/生成器推导式进
  行一般化以针对集合与字典使用字面值语法。

     >>> {x: x*x for x in range(6)}
     {0: 0, 1: 1, 2: 4, 3: 9, 4: 16, 5: 25}
     >>> {('a'*x) for x in range(6)}
     set(['', 'a', 'aa', 'aaa', 'aaaa', 'aaaaa'])

  由 Alexandre Vassalotti 向下移植; bpo-2333。

* 现在 "with" 语句可以在一个语句中使用多个上下文管理器。 上下文管理器
  将按从左到右的顺序处理并且每个都会被视为开始一个新的 "with" 语句。
  这意味着:

     with A() as a, B() as b:
         ... suite of statements ...

  相当于:

     with A() as a:
         with B() as b:
             ... suite of statements ...

  "contextlib.nested()" 函数提供了非常类似的功能，因此它不再必要并已被
  弃用。

  (Proposed in https://codereview.appspot.com/53094; implemented by
  Georg Brandl.)

* Conversions between floating-point numbers and strings are now
  correctly rounded on most platforms.  These conversions occur in
  many different places: "str()" on floats and complex numbers; the
  "float" and "complex" constructors; numeric formatting; serializing
  and deserializing floats and complex numbers using the "marshal",
  "pickle" and "json" modules; parsing of float and imaginary literals
  in Python code; and "Decimal"-to-float conversion.

  Related to this, the "repr()" of a floating-point number *x* now
  returns a result based on the shortest decimal string that's
  guaranteed to round back to *x* under correct rounding (with round-
  half-to-even rounding mode).  Previously it gave a string based on
  rounding x to 17 decimal digits.

  The rounding library responsible for this improvement works on
  Windows and on Unix platforms using the gcc, icc, or suncc
  compilers.  There may be a small number of platforms where correct
  operation of this code cannot be guaranteed, so the code is not used
  on such systems.  You can find out which code is being used by
  checking "sys.float_repr_style",  which will be "short" if the new
  code is in use and "legacy" if it isn't.

  Implemented by Eric Smith and Mark Dickinson, using David Gay's
  "dtoa.c" library; bpo-7117.

* Conversions from long integers and regular integers to floating
  point now round differently, returning the floating-point number
  closest to the number.  This doesn't matter for small integers that
  can be converted exactly, but for large numbers that will
  unavoidably lose precision, Python 2.7 now approximates more
  closely.  For example, Python 2.6 computed the following:

     >>> n = 295147905179352891391
     >>> float(n)
     2.9514790517935283e+20
     >>> n - long(float(n))
     65535L

  Python 2.7's floating-point result is larger, but much closer to the
  true value:

     >>> n = 295147905179352891391
     >>> float(n)
     2.9514790517935289e+20
     >>> n - long(float(n))
     -1L

  (Implemented by Mark Dickinson; bpo-3166.)

  Integer division is also more accurate in its rounding behaviours.
  (Also implemented by Mark Dickinson; bpo-1811.)

* Implicit coercion for complex numbers has been removed; the
  interpreter will no longer ever attempt to call a "__coerce__()"
  method on complex objects.  (Removed by Meador Inge and Mark
  Dickinson; bpo-5211.)

* The "str.format()" method now supports automatic numbering of the
  replacement fields.  This makes using "str.format()" more closely
  resemble using "%s" formatting:

     >>> '{}:{}:{}'.format(2009, 04, 'Sunday')
     '2009:4:Sunday'
     >>> '{}:{}:{day}'.format(2009, 4, day='Sunday')
     '2009:4:Sunday'

  The auto-numbering takes the fields from left to right, so the first
  "{...}" specifier will use the first argument to "str.format()", the
  next specifier will use the next argument, and so on.  You can't mix
  auto-numbering and explicit numbering -- either number all of your
  specifier fields or none of them -- but you can mix auto-numbering
  and named fields, as in the second example above.  (Contributed by
  Eric Smith; bpo-5237.)

  Complex numbers now correctly support usage with "format()", and
  default to being right-aligned. Specifying a precision or comma-
  separation applies to both the real and imaginary parts of the
  number, but a specified field width and alignment is applied to the
  whole of the resulting "1.5+3j" output.  (Contributed by Eric Smith;
  bpo-1588 and bpo-7988.)

  The 'F' format code now always formats its output using uppercase
  characters, so it will now produce 'INF' and 'NAN'. (Contributed by
  Eric Smith; bpo-3382.)

  A low-level change: the "object.__format__()" method now triggers a
  "PendingDeprecationWarning" if it's passed a format string, because
  the "__format__()" method for "object" converts the object to a
  string representation and formats that.  Previously the method
  silently applied the format string to the string representation, but
  that could hide mistakes in Python code.  If you're supplying
  formatting information such as an alignment or precision, presumably
  you're expecting the formatting to be applied in some object-
  specific way.  (Fixed by Eric Smith; bpo-7994.)

* The "int()" and "long()" types gained a "bit_length" method that
  returns the number of bits necessary to represent its argument in
  binary:

     >>> n = 37
     >>> bin(n)
     '0b100101'
     >>> n.bit_length()
     6
     >>> n = 2**123-1
     >>> n.bit_length()
     123
     >>> (n+1).bit_length()
     124

  (Contributed by Fredrik Johansson and Victor Stinner; bpo-3439.)

* The "import" statement will no longer try an absolute import if a
  relative import (e.g. "from .os import sep") fails.  This fixes a
  bug, but could possibly break certain "import" statements that were
  only working by accident.  (Fixed by Meador Inge; bpo-7902.)

* It's now possible for a subclass of the built-in "unicode" type to
  override the "__unicode__()" method.  (Implemented by Victor
  Stinner; bpo-1583863.)

* The "bytearray" type's "translate()" method now accepts "None" as
  its first argument.  (Fixed by Georg Brandl; bpo-4759.)

* When using "@classmethod" and "@staticmethod" to wrap methods as
  class or static methods, the wrapper object now exposes the wrapped
  function as their "__func__" attribute. (Contributed by Amaury
  Forgeot d'Arc, after a suggestion by George Sakkis; bpo-5982.)

* When a restricted set of attributes were set using "__slots__",
  deleting an unset attribute would not raise "AttributeError" as you
  would expect.  Fixed by Benjamin Peterson; bpo-7604.)

* Two new encodings are now supported: "cp720", used primarily for
  Arabic text; and "cp858", a variant of CP 850 that adds the euro
  symbol.  (CP720 contributed by Alexander Belchenko and Amaury
  Forgeot d'Arc in bpo-1616979; CP858 contributed by Tim Hatch in
  bpo-8016.)

* The "file" object will now set the "filename" attribute on the
  "IOError" exception when trying to open a directory on POSIX
  platforms (noted by Jan Kaliszewski; bpo-4764), and now explicitly
  checks for and forbids writing to read-only file objects instead of
  trusting the C library to catch and report the error (fixed by
  Stefan Krah; bpo-5677).

* The Python tokenizer now translates line endings itself, so the
  "compile()" built-in function now accepts code using any line-ending
  convention.  Additionally, it no longer requires that the code end
  in a newline.

* Extra parentheses in function definitions are illegal in Python 3.x,
  meaning that you get a syntax error from "def f((x)): pass".  In
  Python3-warning mode, Python 2.7 will now warn about this odd usage.
  (Noted by James Lingard; bpo-7362.)

* It's now possible to create weak references to old-style class
  objects.  New-style classes were always weak-referenceable.  (Fixed
  by Antoine Pitrou; bpo-8268.)

* When a module object is garbage-collected, the module's dictionary
  is now only cleared if no one else is holding a reference to the
  dictionary (bpo-7140).


解释器改动
----------

A new environment variable, "PYTHONWARNINGS", allows controlling
warnings.  It should be set to a string containing warning settings,
equivalent to those used with the "-W" switch, separated by commas.
(Contributed by Brian Curtin; bpo-7301.)

For example, the following setting will print warnings every time they
occur, but turn warnings from the "Cookie" module into an error.  (The
exact syntax for setting an environment variable varies across
operating systems and shells.)

   export PYTHONWARNINGS=all,error:::Cookie:0


性能优化
--------

Several performance enhancements have been added:

* A new opcode was added to perform the initial setup for "with"
  statements, looking up the "__enter__()" and "__exit__()" methods.
  (Contributed by Benjamin Peterson.)

* The garbage collector now performs better for one common usage
  pattern: when many objects are being allocated without deallocating
  any of them.  This would previously take quadratic time for garbage
  collection, but now the number of full garbage collections is
  reduced as the number of objects on the heap grows. The new logic
  only performs a full garbage collection pass when the middle
  generation has been collected 10 times and when the number of
  survivor objects from the middle generation exceeds 10% of the
  number of objects in the oldest generation.  (Suggested by Martin
  von Löwis and implemented by Antoine Pitrou; bpo-4074.)

* The garbage collector tries to avoid tracking simple containers
  which can't be part of a cycle. In Python 2.7, this is now true for
  tuples and dicts containing atomic types (such as ints, strings,
  etc.). Transitively, a dict containing tuples of atomic types won't
  be tracked either. This helps reduce the cost of each garbage
  collection by decreasing the number of objects to be considered and
  traversed by the collector. (Contributed by Antoine Pitrou;
  bpo-4688.)

* Long integers are now stored internally either in base "2**15" or in
  base "2**30", the base being determined at build time.  Previously,
  they were always stored in base "2**15".  Using base "2**30" gives
  significant performance improvements on 64-bit machines, but
  benchmark results on 32-bit machines have been mixed.  Therefore,
  the default is to use base "2**30" on 64-bit machines and base
  "2**15" on 32-bit machines; on Unix, there's a new configure option
  "--enable-big-digits" that can be used to override this default.

  Apart from the performance improvements this change should be
  invisible to end users, with one exception: for testing and
  debugging purposes there's a new structseq "sys.long_info" that
  provides information about the internal format, giving the number of
  bits per digit and the size in bytes of the C type used to store
  each digit:

     >>> import sys
     >>> sys.long_info
     sys.long_info(bits_per_digit=30, sizeof_digit=4)

  （由 Mark Dickinson在 bpo-4258 贡献）

  Another set of changes made long objects a few bytes smaller: 2
  bytes smaller on 32-bit systems and 6 bytes on 64-bit. (Contributed
  by Mark Dickinson; bpo-5260.)

* The division algorithm for long integers has been made faster by
  tightening the inner loop, doing shifts instead of multiplications,
  and fixing an unnecessary extra iteration. Various benchmarks show
  speedups of between 50% and 150% for long integer divisions and
  modulo operations. (Contributed by Mark Dickinson; bpo-5512.)
  Bitwise operations are also significantly faster (initial patch by
  Gregory Smith; bpo-1087418).

* The implementation of "%" checks for the left-side operand being a
  Python string and special-cases it; this results in a 1--3%
  performance increase for applications that frequently use "%" with
  strings, such as templating libraries. (Implemented by Collin
  Winter; bpo-5176.)

* List comprehensions with an "if" condition are compiled into faster
  bytecode.  (Patch by Antoine Pitrou, back-ported to 2.7 by Jeffrey
  Yasskin; bpo-4715.)

* Converting an integer or long integer to a decimal string was made
  faster by special-casing base 10 instead of using a generalized
  conversion function that supports arbitrary bases. (Patch by Gawain
  Bolton; bpo-6713.)

* The "split()", "replace()", "rindex()", "rpartition()", and
  "rsplit()" methods of string-like types (strings, Unicode strings,
  and "bytearray" objects) now use a fast reverse-search algorithm
  instead of a character-by-character scan.  This is sometimes faster
  by a factor of 10.  (Added by Florent Xicluna; bpo-7462 and
  bpo-7622.)

* The "pickle" and "cPickle" modules now automatically intern the
  strings used for attribute names, reducing memory usage of the
  objects resulting from unpickling.  (Contributed by Jake McGuire;
  bpo-5084.)

* The "cPickle" module now special-cases dictionaries, nearly halving
  the time required to pickle them. (Contributed by Collin Winter;
  bpo-5670.)


新增和改进的模块
================

As in every release, Python's standard library received a number of
enhancements and bug fixes.  Here's a partial list of the most notable
changes, sorted alphabetically by module name. Consult the "Misc/NEWS"
file in the source tree for a more complete list of changes, or look
through the Subversion logs for all the details.

* The "bdb" module's base debugging class "Bdb" gained a feature for
  skipping modules.  The constructor now takes an iterable containing
  glob-style patterns such as "django.*"; the debugger will not step
  into stack frames from a module that matches one of these patterns.
  (Contributed by Maru Newby after a suggestion by Senthil Kumaran;
  bpo-5142.)

* The "binascii" module now supports the buffer API, so it can be used
  with "memoryview" instances and other similar buffer objects.
  (Backported from 3.x by Florent Xicluna; bpo-7703.)

* Updated module: the "bsddb" module has been updated from 4.7.2devel9
  to version 4.8.4 of the pybsddb package. The new version features
  better Python 3.x compatibility, various bug fixes, and adds several
  new BerkeleyDB flags and methods. (Updated by Jesús Cea Avión;
  bpo-8156.  The pybsddb changelog can be read at
  https://hg.jcea.es/pybsddb/file/tip/ChangeLog.)

* The "bz2" module's "BZ2File" now supports the context management
  protocol, so you can write "with bz2.BZ2File(...) as f:".
  (Contributed by Hagen Fürstenau; bpo-3860.)

* New class: the "Counter" class in the "collections" module is useful
  for tallying data.  "Counter" instances behave mostly like
  dictionaries but return zero for missing keys instead of raising a
  "KeyError":

     >>> from collections import Counter
     >>> c = Counter()
     >>> for letter in 'here is a sample of english text':
     ...   c[letter] += 1
     ...
     >>> c 
     Counter({' ': 6, 'e': 5, 's': 3, 'a': 2, 'i': 2, 'h': 2,
     'l': 2, 't': 2, 'g': 1, 'f': 1, 'm': 1, 'o': 1, 'n': 1,
     'p': 1, 'r': 1, 'x': 1})
     >>> c['e']
     5
     >>> c['z']
     0

  There are three additional "Counter" methods. "most_common()"
  returns the N most common elements and their counts.  "elements()"
  returns an iterator over the contained elements, repeating each
  element as many times as its count. "subtract()" takes an iterable
  and subtracts one for each element instead of adding; if the
  argument is a dictionary or another "Counter", the counts are
  subtracted.

     >>> c.most_common(5)
     [(' ', 6), ('e', 5), ('s', 3), ('a', 2), ('i', 2)]
     >>> c.elements() ->
        'a', 'a', ' ', ' ', ' ', ' ', ' ', ' ',
        'e', 'e', 'e', 'e', 'e', 'g', 'f', 'i', 'i',
        'h', 'h', 'm', 'l', 'l', 'o', 'n', 'p', 's',
        's', 's', 'r', 't', 't', 'x'
     >>> c['e']
     5
     >>> c.subtract('very heavy on the letter e')
     >>> c['e']    # Count is now lower
     -1

  Contributed by Raymond Hettinger; bpo-1696199.

  New class: "OrderedDict" is described in the earlier section PEP 372
  ：将有序字典 添加到收藏集.

  New method: The "deque" data type now has a "count()" method that
  returns the number of contained elements equal to the supplied
  argument *x*, and a "reverse()" method that reverses the elements of
  the deque in-place.  "deque" also exposes its maximum length as the
  read-only "maxlen" attribute. (Both features added by Raymond
  Hettinger.)

  The "namedtuple" class now has an optional *rename* parameter. If
  *rename* is true, field names that are invalid because they've been
  repeated or aren't legal Python identifiers will be renamed to legal
  names that are derived from the field's position within the list of
  fields:

  >>> from collections import namedtuple
  >>> T = namedtuple('T', ['field1', '$illegal', 'for', 'field2'], rename=True)
  >>> T._fields
  ('field1', '_1', '_2', 'field2')

  (Added by Raymond Hettinger; bpo-1818.)

  Finally, the "Mapping" abstract base class now returns
  "NotImplemented" if a mapping is compared to another type that isn't
  a "Mapping". (Fixed by Daniel Stutzbach; bpo-8729.)

* Constructors for the parsing classes in the "ConfigParser" module
  now take an *allow_no_value* parameter, defaulting to false; if
  true, options without values will be allowed.  For example:

     >>> import ConfigParser, StringIO
     >>> sample_config = """
     ... [mysqld]
     ... user = mysql
     ... pid-file = /var/run/mysqld/mysqld.pid
     ... skip-bdb
     ... """
     >>> config = ConfigParser.RawConfigParser(allow_no_value=True)
     >>> config.readfp(StringIO.StringIO(sample_config))
     >>> config.get('mysqld', 'user')
     'mysql'
     >>> print config.get('mysqld', 'skip-bdb')
     None
     >>> print config.get('mysqld', 'unknown')
     Traceback (most recent call last):
       ...
     NoOptionError: No option 'unknown' in section: 'mysqld'

  (Contributed by Mats Kindahl; bpo-7005.)

* Deprecated function: "contextlib.nested()", which allows handling
  more than one context manager with a single "with" statement, has
  been deprecated, because the "with" statement now supports multiple
  context managers.

* The "cookielib" module now ignores cookies that have an invalid
  version field, one that doesn't contain an integer value.  (Fixed by
  John J. Lee; bpo-3924.)

* The "copy" module's "deepcopy()" function will now correctly copy
  bound instance methods.  (Implemented by Robert Collins; bpo-1515.)

* The "ctypes" module now always converts "None" to a C "NULL" pointer
  for arguments declared as pointers.  (Changed by Thomas Heller;
  bpo-4606.)  The underlying libffi library has been updated to
  version 3.0.9, containing various fixes for different platforms.
  (Updated by Matthias Klose; bpo-8142.)

* New method: the "datetime" module's "timedelta" class gained a
  "total_seconds()" method that returns the number of seconds in the
  duration.  (Contributed by Brian Quinlan; bpo-5788.)

* New method: the "Decimal" class gained a "from_float()" class method
  that performs an exact conversion of a floating-point number to a
  "Decimal". This exact conversion strives for the closest decimal
  approximation to the floating-point representation's value; the
  resulting decimal value will therefore still include the inaccuracy,
  if any. For example, "Decimal.from_float(0.1)" returns "Decimal('0.
  1000000000000000055511151231257827021181583404541015625')".
  (Implemented by Raymond Hettinger; bpo-4796.)

  Comparing instances of "Decimal" with floating-point numbers now
  produces sensible results based on the numeric values of the
  operands.  Previously such comparisons would fall back to Python's
  default rules for comparing objects, which produced arbitrary
  results based on their type.  Note that you still cannot combine
  "Decimal" and floating-point in other operations such as addition,
  since you should be explicitly choosing how to convert between float
  and "Decimal".  (Fixed by Mark Dickinson; bpo-2531.)

  The constructor for "Decimal" now accepts floating-point numbers
  (added by Raymond Hettinger; bpo-8257) and non-European Unicode
  characters such as Arabic-Indic digits (contributed by Mark
  Dickinson; bpo-6595).

  Most of the methods of the "Context" class now accept integers as
  well as "Decimal" instances; the only exceptions are the
  "canonical()" and "is_canonical()" methods.  (Patch by Juan José
  Conti; bpo-7633.)

  When using "Decimal" instances with a string's "format()" method,
  the default alignment was previously left-alignment.  This has been
  changed to right-alignment, which is more sensible for numeric
  types.  (Changed by Mark Dickinson; bpo-6857.)

  Comparisons involving a signaling NaN value (or "sNAN") now signal
  "InvalidOperation" instead of silently returning a true or false
  value depending on the comparison operator.  Quiet NaN values (or
  "NaN") are now hashable.  (Fixed by Mark Dickinson; bpo-7279.)

* The "difflib" module now produces output that is more compatible
  with modern **diff**/**patch** tools through one small change, using
  a tab character instead of spaces as a separator in the header
  giving the filename.  (Fixed by Anatoly Techtonik; bpo-7585.)

* The Distutils "sdist" command now always regenerates the "MANIFEST"
  file, since even if the "MANIFEST.in" or "setup.py" files haven't
  been modified, the user might have created some new files that
  should be included. (Fixed by Tarek Ziadé; bpo-8688.)

* The "doctest" module's "IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL" flag will now
  ignore the name of the module containing the exception being tested.
  (Patch by Lennart Regebro; bpo-7490.)

* The "email" module's "Message" class will now accept a Unicode-
  valued payload, automatically converting the payload to the encoding
  specified by "output_charset". (Added by R. David Murray;
  bpo-1368247.)

* The "Fraction" class now accepts a single float or "Decimal"
  instance, or two rational numbers, as arguments to its constructor.
  (Implemented by Mark Dickinson; rationals added in bpo-5812, and
  float/decimal in bpo-8294.)

  Ordering comparisons ("<", "<=", ">", ">=") between fractions and
  complex numbers now raise a "TypeError". This fixes an oversight,
  making the "Fraction" match the other numeric types.

* New class: "FTP_TLS" in the "ftplib" module provides secure FTP
  connections using TLS encapsulation of authentication as well as
  subsequent control and data transfers. (Contributed by Giampaolo
  Rodola; bpo-2054.)

  The "storbinary()" method for binary uploads can now restart uploads
  thanks to an added *rest* parameter (patch by Pablo Mouzo;
  bpo-6845.)

* New class decorator: "total_ordering()" in the "functools" module
  takes a class that defines an "__eq__()" method and one of
  "__lt__()", "__le__()", "__gt__()", or "__ge__()", and generates the
  missing comparison methods.  Since the "__cmp__()" method is being
  deprecated in Python 3.x, this decorator makes it easier to define
  ordered classes. (Added by Raymond Hettinger; bpo-5479.)

  New function: "cmp_to_key()" will take an old-style comparison
  function that expects two arguments and return a new callable that
  can be used as the *key* parameter to functions such as "sorted()",
  "min()" and "max()", etc.  The primary intended use is to help with
  making code compatible with Python 3.x. (Added by Raymond
  Hettinger.)

* New function: the "gc" module's "is_tracked()" returns true if a
  given instance is tracked by the garbage collector, false otherwise.
  (Contributed by Antoine Pitrou; bpo-4688.)

* The "gzip" module's "GzipFile" now supports the context management
  protocol, so you can write "with gzip.GzipFile(...) as f:"
  (contributed by Hagen Fürstenau; bpo-3860), and it now implements
  the "io.BufferedIOBase" ABC, so you can wrap it with
  "io.BufferedReader" for faster processing (contributed by Nir Aides;
  bpo-7471). It's also now possible to override the modification time
  recorded in a gzipped file by providing an optional timestamp to the
  constructor.  (Contributed by Jacques Frechet; bpo-4272.)

  Files in gzip format can be padded with trailing zero bytes; the
  "gzip" module will now consume these trailing bytes.  (Fixed by
  Tadek Pietraszek and Brian Curtin; bpo-2846.)

* New attribute: the "hashlib" module now has an "algorithms"
  attribute containing a tuple naming the supported algorithms. In
  Python 2.7, "hashlib.algorithms" contains "('md5', 'sha1', 'sha224',
  'sha256', 'sha384', 'sha512')". (Contributed by Carl Chenet;
  bpo-7418.)

* The default "HTTPResponse" class used by the "httplib" module now
  supports buffering, resulting in much faster reading of HTTP
  responses. (Contributed by Kristján Valur Jónsson; bpo-4879.)

  The "HTTPConnection" and "HTTPSConnection" classes now support a
  *source_address* parameter, a "(host, port)" 2-tuple giving the
  source address that will be used for the connection. (Contributed by
  Eldon Ziegler; bpo-3972.)

* The "ihooks" module now supports relative imports.  Note that
  "ihooks" is an older module for customizing imports, superseded by
  the "imputil" module added in Python 2.0. (Relative import support
  added by Neil Schemenauer.)

* The "imaplib" module now supports IPv6 addresses. (Contributed by
  Derek Morr; bpo-1655.)

* New function: the "inspect" module's "getcallargs()" takes a
  callable and its positional and keyword arguments, and figures out
  which of the callable's parameters will receive each argument,
  returning a dictionary mapping argument names to their values.  For
  example:

     >>> from inspect import getcallargs
     >>> def f(a, b=1, *pos, **named):
     ...     pass
     >>> getcallargs(f, 1, 2, 3)
     {'a': 1, 'b': 2, 'pos': (3,), 'named': {}}
     >>> getcallargs(f, a=2, x=4)
     {'a': 2, 'b': 1, 'pos': (), 'named': {'x': 4}}
     >>> getcallargs(f)
     Traceback (most recent call last):
     ...
     TypeError: f() takes at least 1 argument (0 given)

  由 Georg Sakkis 在 bpo-3135 中贡献。

* Updated module: The "io" library has been upgraded to the version
  shipped with Python 3.1.  For 3.1, the I/O library was entirely
  rewritten in C and is 2 to 20 times faster depending on the task
  being performed.  The original Python version was renamed to the
  "_pyio" module.

  One minor resulting change: the "io.TextIOBase" class now has an
  "errors" attribute giving the error setting used for encoding and
  decoding errors (one of "'strict'", "'replace'", "'ignore'").

  The "io.FileIO" class now raises an "OSError" when passed an invalid
  file descriptor.  (Implemented by Benjamin Peterson; bpo-4991.)  The
  "truncate()" method now preserves the file position; previously it
  would change the file position to the end of the new file.  (Fixed
  by Pascal Chambon; bpo-6939.)

* New function: "itertools.compress(data, selectors)" takes two
  iterators.  Elements of *data* are returned if the corresponding
  value in *selectors* is true:

     itertools.compress('ABCDEF', [1,0,1,0,1,1]) =>
       A, C, E, F

  New function: "itertools.combinations_with_replacement(iter, r)"
  returns all the possible *r*-length combinations of elements from
  the iterable *iter*.  Unlike "combinations()", individual elements
  can be repeated in the generated combinations:

     itertools.combinations_with_replacement('abc', 2) =>
       ('a', 'a'), ('a', 'b'), ('a', 'c'),
       ('b', 'b'), ('b', 'c'), ('c', 'c')

  Note that elements are treated as unique depending on their position
  in the input, not their actual values.

  The "itertools.count()" function now has a *step* argument that
  allows incrementing by values other than 1.  "count()" also now
  allows keyword arguments, and using non-integer values such as
  floats or "Decimal" instances.  (Implemented by Raymond Hettinger;
  bpo-5032.)

  "itertools.combinations()" and "itertools.product()" previously
  raised "ValueError" for values of *r* larger than the input
  iterable.  This was deemed a specification error, so they now return
  an empty iterator.  (Fixed by Raymond Hettinger; bpo-4816.)

* Updated module: The "json" module was upgraded to version 2.0.9 of
  the simplejson package, which includes a C extension that makes
  encoding and decoding faster. (Contributed by Bob Ippolito;
  bpo-4136.)

  To support the new "collections.OrderedDict" type, "json.load()" now
  has an optional *object_pairs_hook* parameter that will be called
  with any object literal that decodes to a list of pairs.
  (Contributed by Raymond Hettinger; bpo-5381.)

* The "mailbox" module's "Maildir" class now records the timestamp on
  the directories it reads, and only re-reads them if the modification
  time has subsequently changed.  This improves performance by
  avoiding unneeded directory scans.  (Fixed by A.M. Kuchling and
  Antoine Pitrou; bpo-1607951, bpo-6896.)

* New functions: the "math" module gained "erf()" and "erfc()" for the
  error function and the complementary error function, "expm1()" which
  computes "e**x - 1" with more precision than using "exp()" and
  subtracting 1, "gamma()" for the Gamma function, and "lgamma()" for
  the natural log of the Gamma function. (Contributed by Mark
  Dickinson and nirinA raseliarison; bpo-3366.)

* The "multiprocessing" module's "Manager*" classes can now be passed
  a callable that will be called whenever a subprocess is started,
  along with a set of arguments that will be passed to the callable.
  (Contributed by lekma; bpo-5585.)

  The "Pool" class, which controls a pool of worker processes, now has
  an optional *maxtasksperchild* parameter.  Worker processes will
  perform the specified number of tasks and then exit, causing the
  "Pool" to start a new worker.  This is useful if tasks may leak
  memory or other resources, or if some tasks will cause the worker to
  become very large. (Contributed by Charles Cazabon; bpo-6963.)

* The "nntplib" module now supports IPv6 addresses. (Contributed by
  Derek Morr; bpo-1664.)

* New functions: the "os" module wraps the following POSIX system
  calls: "getresgid()" and "getresuid()", which return the real,
  effective, and saved GIDs and UIDs; "setresgid()" and "setresuid()",
  which set real, effective, and saved GIDs and UIDs to new values;
  "initgroups()", which initialize the group access list for the
  current process.  (GID/UID functions contributed by Travis H.;
  bpo-6508.  Support for initgroups added by Jean-Paul Calderone;
  bpo-7333.)

  The "os.fork()" function now re-initializes the import lock in the
  child process; this fixes problems on Solaris when "fork()" is
  called from a thread.  (Fixed by Zsolt Cserna; bpo-7242.)

* In the "os.path" module, the "normpath()" and "abspath()" functions
  now preserve Unicode; if their input path is a Unicode string, the
  return value is also a Unicode string. ("normpath()" fixed by Matt
  Giuca in bpo-5827; "abspath()" fixed by Ezio Melotti in bpo-3426.)

* The "pydoc" module now has help for the various symbols that Python
  uses.  You can now do "help('<<')" or "help('@')", for example.
  (Contributed by David Laban; bpo-4739.)

* The "re" module's "split()", "sub()", and "subn()" now accept an
  optional *flags* argument, for consistency with the other functions
  in the module.  (Added by Gregory P. Smith.)

* New function: "run_path()" in the "runpy" module will execute the
  code at a provided *path* argument.  *path* can be the path of a
  Python source file ("example.py"), a compiled bytecode file
  ("example.pyc"), a directory ("./package/"), or a zip archive
  ("example.zip").  If a directory or zip path is provided, it will be
  added to the front of "sys.path" and the module "__main__" will be
  imported.  It's expected that the directory or zip contains a
  "__main__.py"; if it doesn't, some other "__main__.py" might be
  imported from a location later in "sys.path".  This makes more of
  the machinery of "runpy" available to scripts that want to mimic the
  way Python's command line processes an explicit path name. (Added by
  Nick Coghlan; bpo-6816.)

* New function: in the "shutil" module, "make_archive()" takes a
  filename, archive type (zip or tar-format), and a directory path,
  and creates an archive containing the directory's contents. (Added
  by Tarek Ziadé.)

  "shutil"'s "copyfile()" and "copytree()" functions now raise a
  "SpecialFileError" exception when asked to copy a named pipe.
  Previously the code would treat named pipes like a regular file by
  opening them for reading, and this would block indefinitely.  (Fixed
  by Antoine Pitrou; bpo-3002.)

* The "signal" module no longer re-installs the signal handler unless
  this is truly necessary, which fixes a bug that could make it
  impossible to catch the EINTR signal robustly.  (Fixed by Charles-
  Francois Natali; bpo-8354.)

* New functions: in the "site" module, three new functions return
  various site- and user-specific paths. "getsitepackages()" returns a
  list containing all global site-packages directories,
  "getusersitepackages()" returns the path of the user's site-packages
  directory, and "getuserbase()" returns the value of the "USER_BASE"
  environment variable, giving the path to a directory that can be
  used to store data. (Contributed by Tarek Ziadé; bpo-6693.)

  The "site" module now reports exceptions occurring when the
  "sitecustomize" module is imported, and will no longer catch and
  swallow the "KeyboardInterrupt" exception.  (Fixed by Victor
  Stinner; bpo-3137.)

* The "create_connection()" function gained a *source_address*
  parameter, a "(host, port)" 2-tuple giving the source address that
  will be used for the connection. (Contributed by Eldon Ziegler;
  bpo-3972.)

  The "recv_into()" and "recvfrom_into()" methods will now write into
  objects that support the buffer API, most usefully the "bytearray"
  and "memoryview" objects.  (Implemented by Antoine Pitrou;
  bpo-8104.)

* The "SocketServer" module's "TCPServer" class now supports socket
  timeouts and disabling the Nagle algorithm. The
  "disable_nagle_algorithm" class attribute defaults to "False"; if
  overridden to be true, new request connections will have the
  TCP_NODELAY option set to prevent buffering many small sends into a
  single TCP packet. The "timeout" class attribute can hold a timeout
  in seconds that will be applied to the request socket; if no request
  is received within that time, "handle_timeout()" will be called and
  "handle_request()" will return. (Contributed by Kristján Valur
  Jónsson; bpo-6192 and bpo-6267.)

* Updated module: the "sqlite3" module has been updated to version
  2.6.0 of the pysqlite package. Version 2.6.0 includes a number of
  bugfixes, and adds the ability to load SQLite extensions from shared
  libraries. Call the "enable_load_extension(True)" method to enable
  extensions, and then call "load_extension()" to load a particular
  shared library. (Updated by Gerhard Häring.)

* The "ssl" module's "SSLSocket" objects now support the buffer API,
  which fixed a test suite failure (fix by Antoine Pitrou; bpo-7133)
  and automatically set OpenSSL's "SSL_MODE_AUTO_RETRY", which will
  prevent an error code being returned from "recv()" operations that
  trigger an SSL renegotiation (fix by Antoine Pitrou; bpo-8222).

  The "wrap_socket()" constructor function now takes a *ciphers*
  argument that's a string listing the encryption algorithms to be
  allowed; the format of the string is described in the OpenSSL
  documentation. (Added by Antoine Pitrou; bpo-8322.)

  Another change makes the extension load all of OpenSSL's ciphers and
  digest algorithms so that they're all available.  Some SSL
  certificates couldn't be verified, reporting an "unknown algorithm"
  error.  (Reported by Beda Kosata, and fixed by Antoine Pitrou;
  bpo-8484.)

  The version of OpenSSL being used is now available as the module
  attributes "ssl.OPENSSL_VERSION" (a string),
  "ssl.OPENSSL_VERSION_INFO" (a 5-tuple), and
  "ssl.OPENSSL_VERSION_NUMBER" (an integer).  (Added by Antoine
  Pitrou; bpo-8321.)

* The "struct" module will no longer silently ignore overflow errors
  when a value is too large for a particular integer format code (one
  of "bBhHiIlLqQ"); it now always raises a "struct.error" exception.
  (Changed by Mark Dickinson; bpo-1523.)  The "pack()" function will
  also attempt to use "__index__()" to convert and pack non-integers
  before trying the "__int__()" method or reporting an error. (Changed
  by Mark Dickinson; bpo-8300.)

* New function: the "subprocess" module's "check_output()" runs a
  command with a specified set of arguments and returns the command's
  output as a string when the command runs without error, or raises a
  "CalledProcessError" exception otherwise.

     >>> subprocess.check_output(['df', '-h', '.'])
     'Filesystem     Size   Used  Avail Capacity  Mounted on\n
     /dev/disk0s2    52G    49G   3.0G    94%    /\n'

     >>> subprocess.check_output(['df', '-h', '/bogus'])
       ...
     subprocess.CalledProcessError: Command '['df', '-h', '/bogus']' returned non-zero exit status 1

  （由 Gregory P. Smith 贡献）

  The "subprocess" module will now retry its internal system calls on
  receiving an "EINTR" signal.  (Reported by several people; final
  patch by Gregory P. Smith in bpo-1068268.)

* New function: "is_declared_global()" in the "symtable" module
  returns true for variables that are explicitly declared to be
  global, false for ones that are implicitly global. (Contributed by
  Jeremy Hylton.)

* The "syslog" module will now use the value of "sys.argv[0]" as the
  identifier instead of the previous default value of "'python'".
  (Changed by Sean Reifschneider; bpo-8451.)

* The "sys.version_info" value is now a named tuple, with attributes
  named "major", "minor", "micro", "releaselevel", and "serial".
  (Contributed by Ross Light; bpo-4285.)

  "sys.getwindowsversion()" also returns a named tuple, with
  attributes named "major", "minor", "build", "platform",
  "service_pack", "service_pack_major", "service_pack_minor",
  "suite_mask", and "product_type".  (Contributed by Brian Curtin;
  bpo-7766.)

* The "tarfile" module's default error handling has changed, to no
  longer suppress fatal errors.  The default error level was
  previously 0, which meant that errors would only result in a message
  being written to the debug log, but because the debug log is not
  activated by default, these errors go unnoticed.  The default error
  level is now 1, which raises an exception if there's an error.
  (Changed by Lars Gustäbel; bpo-7357.)

  "tarfile" now supports filtering the "TarInfo" objects being added
  to a tar file.  When you call "add()", you may supply an optional
  *filter* argument that's a callable.  The *filter* callable will be
  passed the "TarInfo" for every file being added, and can modify and
  return it. If the callable returns "None", the file will be excluded
  from the resulting archive.  This is more powerful than the existing
  *exclude* argument, which has therefore been deprecated. (Added by
  Lars Gustäbel; bpo-6856.) The "TarFile" class also now supports the
  context management protocol. (Added by Lars Gustäbel; bpo-7232.)

* The "wait()" method of the "threading.Event" class now returns the
  internal flag on exit.  This means the method will usually return
  true because "wait()" is supposed to block until the internal flag
  becomes true.  The return value will only be false if a timeout was
  provided and the operation timed out. (Contributed by Tim Lesher;
  bpo-1674032.)

* The Unicode database provided by the "unicodedata" module is now
  used internally to determine which characters are numeric,
  whitespace, or represent line breaks.  The database also includes
  information from the "Unihan.txt" data file (patch by Anders
  Chrigström and Amaury Forgeot d'Arc; bpo-1571184) and has been
  updated to version 5.2.0 (updated by Florent Xicluna; bpo-8024).

* The "urlparse" module's "urlsplit()" now handles unknown URL schemes
  in a fashion compliant with **RFC 3986**: if the URL is of the form
  ""<something>://..."", the text before the "://" is treated as the
  scheme, even if it's a made-up scheme that the module doesn't know
  about.  This change may break code that worked around the old
  behaviour.  For example, Python 2.6.4 or 2.5 will return the
  following:

     >>> import urlparse
     >>> urlparse.urlsplit('invented://host/filename?query')
     ('invented', '', '//host/filename?query', '', '')

  Python 2.7 (and Python 2.6.5) will return:

     >>> import urlparse
     >>> urlparse.urlsplit('invented://host/filename?query')
     ('invented', 'host', '/filename?query', '', '')

  (Python 2.7 actually produces slightly different output, since it
  returns a named tuple instead of a standard tuple.)

  The "urlparse" module also supports IPv6 literal addresses as
  defined by **RFC 2732** (contributed by Senthil Kumaran; bpo-2987).

     >>> urlparse.urlparse('http://[1080::8:800:200C:417A]/foo')
     ParseResult(scheme='http', netloc='[1080::8:800:200C:417A]',
                 path='/foo', params='', query='', fragment='')

* New class: the "WeakSet" class in the "weakref" module is a set that
  only holds weak references to its elements; elements will be removed
  once there are no references pointing to them. (Originally
  implemented in Python 3.x by Raymond Hettinger, and backported to
  2.7 by Michael Foord.)

* The "xml.etree.ElementTree" library, no longer escapes ampersands
  and angle brackets when outputting an XML processing instruction
  (which looks like "<?xml-stylesheet href="#style1"?>") or comment
  (which looks like "<!-- comment -->"). (Patch by Neil Muller;
  bpo-2746.)

* The XML-RPC client and server, provided by the "xmlrpclib" and
  "SimpleXMLRPCServer" modules, have improved performance by
  supporting HTTP/1.1 keep-alive and by optionally using gzip encoding
  to compress the XML being exchanged.  The gzip compression is
  controlled by the "encode_threshold" attribute of
  "SimpleXMLRPCRequestHandler", which contains a size in bytes;
  responses larger than this will be compressed. (Contributed by
  Kristján Valur Jónsson; bpo-6267.)

* The "zipfile" module's "ZipFile" now supports the context management
  protocol, so you can write "with zipfile.ZipFile(...) as f:".
  (Contributed by Brian Curtin; bpo-5511.)

  "zipfile" now also supports archiving empty directories and extracts
  them correctly.  (Fixed by Kuba Wieczorek; bpo-4710.) Reading files
  out of an archive is faster, and interleaving "read()" and
  "readline()" now works correctly. (Contributed by Nir Aides;
  bpo-7610.)

  The "is_zipfile()" function now accepts a file object, in addition
  to the path names accepted in earlier versions.  (Contributed by
  Gabriel Genellina; bpo-4756.)

  The "writestr()" method now has an optional *compress_type*
  parameter that lets you override the default compression method
  specified in the "ZipFile" constructor.  (Contributed by Ronald
  Oussoren; bpo-6003.)


新模块：importlib
-----------------

Python 3.1 includes the "importlib" package, a re-implementation of
the logic underlying Python's "import" statement. "importlib" is
useful for implementors of Python interpreters and to users who wish
to write new importers that can participate in the import process.
Python 2.7 doesn't contain the complete "importlib" package, but
instead has a tiny subset that contains a single function,
"import_module()".

"import_module(name, package=None)" imports a module.  *name* is a
string containing the module or package's name.  It's possible to do
relative imports by providing a string that begins with a "."
character, such as "..utils.errors".  For relative imports, the
*package* argument must be provided and is the name of the package
that will be used as the anchor for the relative import.
"import_module()" both inserts the imported module into "sys.modules"
and returns the module object.

这是一些例子:

   >>> from importlib import import_module
   >>> anydbm = import_module('anydbm')  # Standard absolute import
   >>> anydbm
   <module 'anydbm' from '/p/python/Lib/anydbm.py'>
   >>> # Relative import
   >>> file_util = import_module('..file_util', 'distutils.command')
   >>> file_util
   <module 'distutils.file_util' from '/python/Lib/distutils/file_util.pyc'>

"importlib" was implemented by Brett Cannon and introduced in Python
3.1.


新模块：sysconfig
-----------------

The "sysconfig" module has been pulled out of the Distutils package,
becoming a new top-level module in its own right. "sysconfig" provides
functions for getting information about Python's build process:
compiler switches, installation paths, the platform name, and whether
Python is running from its source directory.

该模块中的部分函数:

* "get_config_var()" 返回来自 Python 的 Makefile 和 "pyconfig.h" 文件
  的变量。

* "get_config_vars()" 返回一个包含所有配置变量的字典。

* "get_path()" 返回特定模块类型的配置路径：标准库、站点专属模块、平台
  专属模块等等。

* "is_python_build()" 会在你从 Python 源码树运行二进制可执行文件时返回
  真值，而在其他情况下返回假值。

Consult the "sysconfig" documentation for more details and for a
complete list of functions.

The Distutils package and "sysconfig" are now maintained by Tarek
Ziadé, who has also started a Distutils2 package (source repository at
https://hg.python.org/distutils2/) for developing a next-generation
version of Distutils.


ttk：Tk 主题组件
----------------

Tcl/Tk 8.5 includes a set of themed widgets that re-implement basic Tk
widgets but have a more customizable appearance and can therefore more
closely resemble the native platform's widgets.  This widget set was
originally called Tile, but was renamed to Ttk (for "themed Tk") on
being added to Tcl/Tck release 8.5.

To learn more, read the "ttk" module documentation.  You may also wish
to read the Tcl/Tk manual page describing the Ttk theme engine,
available at https://www.tcl.tk/man/tcl8.5/TkCmd/ttk_intro.html. Some
screenshots of the Python/Ttk code in use are at
https://code.google.com/archive/p/python-ttk/wikis/Screenshots.wiki.

The "tkinter.ttk" module was written by Guilherme Polo and added in
bpo-2983.  An alternate version called "Tile.py", written by Martin
Franklin and maintained by Kevin Walzer, was proposed for inclusion in
bpo-2618, but the authors argued that Guilherme Polo's work was more
comprehensive.


更新的模块：unittest
--------------------

The "unittest" module was greatly enhanced; many new features were
added.  Most of these features were implemented by Michael Foord,
unless otherwise noted.  The enhanced version of the module is
downloadable separately for use with Python versions 2.4 to 2.6,
packaged as the "unittest2" package, from
https://pypi.org/project/unittest2.

When used from the command line, the module can automatically discover
tests.  It's not as fancy as py.test or nose, but provides a simple
way to run tests kept within a set of package directories.  For
example, the following command will search the "test/" subdirectory
for any importable test files named "test*.py":

   python -m unittest discover -s test

Consult the "unittest" module documentation for more details.
(Developed in bpo-6001.)

The "main()" function supports some other new options:

* "-b" or "--buffer" will buffer the standard output and standard
  error streams during each test.  If the test passes, any resulting
  output will be discarded; on failure, the buffered output will be
  displayed.

* "-c" or "--catch" will cause the control-C interrupt to be handled
  more gracefully.  Instead of interrupting the test process
  immediately, the currently running test will be completed and then
  the partial results up to the interruption will be reported. If
  you're impatient, a second press of control-C will cause an
  immediate interruption.

  This control-C handler tries to avoid causing problems when the code
  being tested or the tests being run have defined a signal handler of
  their own, by noticing that a signal handler was already set and
  calling it.  If this doesn't work for you, there's a
  "removeHandler()" decorator that can be used to mark tests that
  should have the control-C handling disabled.

* "-f" or "--failfast" makes test execution stop immediately when a
  test fails instead of continuing to execute further tests.
  (Suggested by Cliff Dyer and implemented by Michael Foord;
  bpo-8074.)

The progress messages now show 'x' for expected failures and 'u' for
unexpected successes when run in verbose mode. (Contributed by
Benjamin Peterson.)

Test cases can raise the "SkipTest" exception to skip a test
(bpo-1034053).

The error messages for "assertEqual()", "assertTrue()", and
"assertFalse()" failures now provide more information.  If you set the
"longMessage" attribute of your "TestCase" classes to true, both the
standard error message and any additional message you provide will be
printed for failures.  (Added by Michael Foord; bpo-5663.)

The "assertRaises()" method now returns a context handler when called
without providing a callable object to run.  For example, you can
write this:

   with self.assertRaises(KeyError):
       {}['foo']

(Implemented by Antoine Pitrou; bpo-4444.)

Module- and class-level setup and teardown fixtures are now supported.
Modules can contain "setUpModule()" and "tearDownModule()" functions.
Classes can have "setUpClass()" and "tearDownClass()" methods that
must be defined as class methods (using "@classmethod" or equivalent).
These functions and methods are invoked when the test runner switches
to a test case in a different module or class.

The methods "addCleanup()" and "doCleanups()" were added.
"addCleanup()" lets you add cleanup functions that will be called
unconditionally (after "setUp()" if "setUp()" fails, otherwise after
"tearDown()"). This allows for much simpler resource allocation and
deallocation during tests (bpo-5679).

A number of new methods were added that provide more specialized
tests.  Many of these methods were written by Google engineers for use
in their test suites; Gregory P. Smith, Michael Foord, and GvR worked
on merging them into Python's version of "unittest".

* "assertIsNone()" and "assertIsNotNone()" take one expression and
  verify that the result is or is not "None".

* "assertIs()" and "assertIsNot()" take two values and check whether
  the two values evaluate to the same object or not. (Added by Michael
  Foord; bpo-2578.)

* "assertIsInstance()" and "assertNotIsInstance()" check whether the
  resulting object is an instance of a particular class, or of one of
  a tuple of classes.  (Added by Georg Brandl; bpo-7031.)

* "assertGreater()", "assertGreaterEqual()", "assertLess()", and
  "assertLessEqual()" compare two quantities.

* "assertMultiLineEqual()" compares two strings, and if they're not
  equal, displays a helpful comparison that highlights the differences
  in the two strings.  This comparison is now used by default when
  Unicode strings are compared with "assertEqual()".

* "assertRegexpMatches()" and "assertNotRegexpMatches()" checks
  whether the first argument is a string matching or not matching the
  regular expression provided as the second argument (bpo-8038).

* "assertRaisesRegexp()" checks whether a particular exception is
  raised, and then also checks that the string representation of the
  exception matches the provided regular expression.

* "assertIn()" and "assertNotIn()" tests whether *first* is or is not
  in  *second*.

* "assertItemsEqual()" tests whether two provided sequences contain
  the same elements.

* "assertSetEqual()" compares whether two sets are equal, and only
  reports the differences between the sets in case of error.

* Similarly, "assertListEqual()" and "assertTupleEqual()" compare the
  specified types and explain any differences without necessarily
  printing their full values; these methods are now used by default
  when comparing lists and tuples using "assertEqual()". More
  generally, "assertSequenceEqual()" compares two sequences and can
  optionally check whether both sequences are of a particular type.

* "assertDictEqual()" compares two dictionaries and reports the
  differences; it's now used by default when you compare two
  dictionaries using "assertEqual()".  "assertDictContainsSubset()"
  checks whether all of the key/value pairs in *first* are found in
  *second*.

* "assertAlmostEqual()" and "assertNotAlmostEqual()" test whether
  *first* and *second* are approximately equal.  This method can
  either round their difference to an optionally specified number of
  *places* (the default is 7) and compare it to zero, or require the
  difference to be smaller than a supplied *delta* value.

* "loadTestsFromName()" properly honors the "suiteClass" attribute of
  the "TestLoader". (Fixed by Mark Roddy; bpo-6866.)

* A new hook lets you extend the "assertEqual()" method to handle new
  data types.  The "addTypeEqualityFunc()" method takes a type object
  and a function. The function will be used when both of the objects
  being compared are of the specified type.  This function should
  compare the two objects and raise an exception if they don't match;
  it's a good idea for the function to provide additional information
  about why the two objects aren't matching, much as the new sequence
  comparison methods do.

"unittest.main()" now takes an optional "exit" argument.  If false,
"main()" doesn't call "sys.exit()", allowing "main()" to be used from
the interactive interpreter. (Contributed by J. Pablo Fernández;
bpo-3379.)

"TestResult" has new "startTestRun()" and "stopTestRun()" methods that
are called immediately before and after a test run.  (Contributed by
Robert Collins; bpo-5728.)

With all these changes, the "unittest.py" was becoming awkwardly
large, so the module was turned into a package and the code split into
several files (by Benjamin Peterson).  This doesn't affect how the
module is imported or used.

参见:

  https://web.archive.org/web/20210619163128/http://www.voidspace.org
  .uk/python/articles/unittest2.shtml
     Describes the new features, how to use them, and the rationale
     for various design decisions.  (By Michael Foord.)


更新的模块：ElementTree 1.3
---------------------------

The version of the ElementTree library included with Python was
updated to version 1.3.  Some of the new features are:

* The various parsing functions now take a *parser* keyword argument
  giving an "XMLParser" instance that will be used.  This makes it
  possible to override the file's internal encoding:

     p = ET.XMLParser(encoding='utf-8')
     t = ET.XML("""<root/>""", parser=p)

  Errors in parsing XML now raise a "ParseError" exception, whose
  instances have a "position" attribute containing a (*line*,
  *column*) tuple giving the location of the problem.

* ElementTree's code for converting trees to a string has been
  significantly reworked, making it roughly twice as fast in many
  cases.  The "ElementTree.write()" and "Element.write()" methods now
  have a *method* parameter that can be "xml" (the default), "html",
  or "text".  HTML mode will output empty elements as
  "<empty></empty>" instead of "<empty/>", and text mode will skip
  over elements and only output the text chunks.  If you set the "tag"
  attribute of an element to "None" but leave its children in place,
  the element will be omitted when the tree is written out, so you
  don't need to do more extensive rearrangement to remove a single
  element.

  Namespace handling has also been improved.  All "xmlns:<whatever>"
  declarations are now output on the root element, not scattered
  throughout the resulting XML.  You can set the default namespace for
  a tree by setting the "default_namespace" attribute and can register
  new prefixes with "register_namespace()".  In XML mode, you can use
  the true/false *xml_declaration* parameter to suppress the XML
  declaration.

* New "Element" method: "extend()" appends the items from a sequence
  to the element's children.  Elements themselves behave like
  sequences, so it's easy to move children from one element to
  another:

     from xml.etree import ElementTree as ET

     t = ET.XML("""<list>
       <item>1</item> <item>2</item>  <item>3</item>
     </list>""")
     new = ET.XML('<root/>')
     new.extend(t)

     # Outputs <root><item>1</item>...</root>
     print ET.tostring(new)

* New "Element" method: "iter()" yields the children of the element as
  a generator.  It's also possible to write "for child in elem:" to
  loop over an element's children.  The existing method
  "getiterator()" is now deprecated, as is "getchildren()" which
  constructs and returns a list of children.

* New "Element" method: "itertext()" yields all chunks of text that
  are descendants of the element.  For example:

     t = ET.XML("""<list>
       <item>1</item> <item>2</item>  <item>3</item>
     </list>""")

     # Outputs ['\n  ', '1', ' ', '2', '  ', '3', '\n']
     print list(t.itertext())

* Deprecated: using an element as a Boolean (i.e., "if elem:") would
  return true if the element had any children, or false if there were
  no children.  This behaviour is confusing -- "None" is false, but so
  is a childless element? -- so it will now trigger a "FutureWarning".
  In your code, you should be explicit: write "len(elem) != 0" if
  you're interested in the number of children, or "elem is not None".

Fredrik Lundh develops ElementTree and produced the 1.3 version; you
can read his article describing 1.3 at https://web.archive.org/web/20
200703234532/http://effbot.org/zone/elementtree-13-intro.htm. Florent
Xicluna updated the version included with Python, after discussions on
python-dev and in bpo-6472.)


构建和 C API 的改变
===================

针对 Python 构建过程和 C API 的改变包括:

* The latest release of the GNU Debugger, GDB 7, can be scripted using
  Python. When you begin debugging an executable program P, GDB will
  look for a file named "P-gdb.py" and automatically read it.  Dave
  Malcolm contributed a "python-gdb.py" that adds a number of commands
  useful when debugging Python itself.  For example, "py-up" and "py-
  down" go up or down one Python stack frame, which usually
  corresponds to several C stack frames.  "py-print" prints the value
  of a Python variable, and "py-bt" prints the Python stack trace.
  (Added as a result of bpo-8032.)

* If you use the ".gdbinit" file provided with Python, the "pyo" macro
  in the 2.7 version now works correctly when the thread being
  debugged doesn't hold the GIL; the macro now acquires it before
  printing. (Contributed by Victor Stinner; bpo-3632.)

* "Py_AddPendingCall()" is now thread-safe, letting any worker thread
  submit notifications to the main Python thread.  This is
  particularly useful for asynchronous IO operations. (Contributed by
  Kristján Valur Jónsson; bpo-4293.)

* New function: "PyCode_NewEmpty()" creates an empty code object; only
  the filename, function name, and first line number are required.
  This is useful for extension modules that are attempting to
  construct a more useful traceback stack.  Previously such extensions
  needed to call "PyCode_New()", which had many more arguments.
  (Added by Jeffrey Yasskin.)

* New function: "PyErr_NewExceptionWithDoc()" creates a new exception
  class, just as the existing "PyErr_NewException()" does, but takes
  an extra "char *" argument containing the docstring for the new
  exception class.  (Added by 'lekma' on the Python bug tracker;
  bpo-7033.)

* New function: "PyFrame_GetLineNumber()" takes a frame object and
  returns the line number that the frame is currently executing.
  Previously code would need to get the index of the bytecode
  instruction currently executing, and then look up the line number
  corresponding to that address.  (Added by Jeffrey Yasskin.)

* New functions: "PyLong_AsLongAndOverflow()" and
  "PyLong_AsLongLongAndOverflow()"  approximates a Python long integer
  as a C long or long long. If the number is too large to fit into the
  output type, an *overflow* flag is set and returned to the caller.
  (Contributed by Case Van Horsen; bpo-7528 and bpo-7767.)

* New function: stemming from the rewrite of string-to-float
  conversion, a new "PyOS_string_to_double()" function was added.  The
  old "PyOS_ascii_strtod()" and "PyOS_ascii_atof()" functions are now
  deprecated.

* New function: "PySys_SetArgvEx()" sets the value of "sys.argv" and
  can optionally update "sys.path" to include the directory containing
  the script named by "sys.argv[0]" depending on the value of an
  *updatepath* parameter.

  This function was added to close a security hole for applications
  that embed Python.  The old function, "PySys_SetArgv()", would
  always update "sys.path", and sometimes it would add the current
  directory.  This meant that, if you ran an application embedding
  Python in a directory controlled by someone else, attackers could
  put a Trojan-horse module in the directory (say, a file named
  "os.py") that your application would then import and run.

  If you maintain a C/C++ application that embeds Python, check
  whether you're calling "PySys_SetArgv()" and carefully consider
  whether the application should be using "PySys_SetArgvEx()" with
  *updatepath* set to false.

  Security issue reported as CVE-2008-5983; discussed in bpo-5753, and
  fixed by Antoine Pitrou.

* New macros: the Python header files now define the following macros:
  "Py_ISALNUM", "Py_ISALPHA", "Py_ISDIGIT", "Py_ISLOWER",
  "Py_ISSPACE", "Py_ISUPPER", "Py_ISXDIGIT", "Py_TOLOWER", and
  "Py_TOUPPER". All of these functions are analogous to the C standard
  macros for classifying characters, but ignore the current locale
  setting, because in several places Python needs to analyze
  characters in a locale-independent way.  (Added by Eric Smith;
  bpo-5793.)

* Removed function: "PyEval_CallObject()" is now only available as a
  macro.  A function version was being kept around to preserve ABI
  linking compatibility, but that was in 1997; it can certainly be
  deleted by now.  (Removed by Antoine Pitrou; bpo-8276.)

* New format codes: the "PyString_FromFormat()",
  "PyString_FromFormatV()", and "PyErr_Format()" functions now accept
  "%lld" and "%llu" format codes for displaying C's long long types.
  (Contributed by Mark Dickinson; bpo-7228.)

* The complicated interaction between threads and process forking has
  been changed.  Previously, the child process created by "os.fork()"
  might fail because the child is created with only a single thread
  running, the thread performing the "os.fork()". If other threads
  were holding a lock, such as Python's import lock, when the fork was
  performed, the lock would still be marked as "held" in the new
  process.  But in the child process nothing would ever release the
  lock, since the other threads weren't replicated, and the child
  process would no longer be able to perform imports.

  Python 2.7 acquires the import lock before performing an
  "os.fork()", and will also clean up any locks created using the
  "threading" module.  C extension modules that have internal locks,
  or that call "fork()" themselves, will not benefit from this clean-
  up.

  (Fixed by Thomas Wouters; bpo-1590864.)

* The "Py_Finalize()" function now calls the internal
  "threading._shutdown()" function; this prevents some exceptions from
  being raised when an interpreter shuts down. (Patch by Adam Olsen;
  bpo-1722344.)

* When using the "PyMemberDef" structure to define attributes of a
  type, Python will no longer let you try to delete or set a
  "T_STRING_INPLACE" attribute.

* Global symbols defined by the "ctypes" module are now prefixed with
  "Py", or with "_ctypes".  (Implemented by Thomas Heller; bpo-3102.)

* New configure option: the "--with-system-expat" switch allows
  building the "pyexpat" module to use the system Expat library.
  (Contributed by Arfrever Frehtes Taifersar Arahesis; bpo-7609.)

* New configure option: the "--with-valgrind" option will now disable
  the pymalloc allocator, which is difficult for the Valgrind memory-
  error detector to analyze correctly. Valgrind will therefore be
  better at detecting memory leaks and overruns. (Contributed by James
  Henstridge; bpo-2422.)

* New configure option: you can now supply an empty string to "--with-
  dbmliborder=" in order to disable all of the various DBM modules.
  (Added by Arfrever Frehtes Taifersar Arahesis; bpo-6491.)

* The **configure** script now checks for floating-point rounding bugs
  on certain 32-bit Intel chips and defines a "X87_DOUBLE_ROUNDING"
  preprocessor definition.  No code currently uses this definition,
  but it's available if anyone wishes to use it. (Added by Mark
  Dickinson; bpo-2937.)

  **configure** also now sets a "LDCXXSHARED" Makefile variable for
  supporting C++ linking.  (Contributed by Arfrever Frehtes Taifersar
  Arahesis; bpo-1222585.)

* The build process now creates the necessary files for pkg-config
  support.  (Contributed by Clinton Roy; bpo-3585.)

* The build process now supports Subversion 1.7.  (Contributed by
  Arfrever Frehtes Taifersar Arahesis; bpo-6094.)


Capsule 对象
------------

Python 3.1 adds a new C datatype, "PyCapsule", for providing a C API
to an extension module.  A capsule is essentially the holder of a C
"void *" pointer, and is made available as a module attribute; for
example, the "socket" module's API is exposed as "socket.CAPI", and
"unicodedata" exposes "ucnhash_CAPI".  Other extensions can import the
module, access its dictionary to get the capsule object, and then get
the "void *" pointer, which will usually point to an array of pointers
to the module's various API functions.

There is an existing data type already used for this, "PyCObject", but
it doesn't provide type safety.  Evil code written in pure Python
could cause a segmentation fault by taking a "PyCObject" from module A
and somehow substituting it for the "PyCObject" in module B.
Capsules know their own name, and getting the pointer requires
providing the name:

   void *vtable;

   if (!PyCapsule_IsValid(capsule, "mymodule.CAPI") {
           PyErr_SetString(PyExc_ValueError, "argument type invalid");
           return NULL;
   }

   vtable = PyCapsule_GetPointer(capsule, "mymodule.CAPI");

You are assured that "vtable" points to whatever you're expecting. If
a different capsule was passed in, "PyCapsule_IsValid()" would detect
the mismatched name and return false.  Refer to 给扩展模块提供C API
for more information on using these objects.

Python 2.7 now uses capsules internally to provide various extension-
module APIs, but the "PyCObject_AsVoidPtr()" was modified to handle
capsules, preserving compile-time compatibility with the "PyCObject"
interface.  Use of "PyCObject_AsVoidPtr()" will signal a
"PendingDeprecationWarning", which is silent by default.

Implemented in Python 3.1 and backported to 2.7 by Larry Hastings;
discussed in bpo-5630.


特定于 Windows 的更改：
-----------------------

* The "msvcrt" module now contains some constants from the
  "crtassem.h" header file: "CRT_ASSEMBLY_VERSION",
  "VC_ASSEMBLY_PUBLICKEYTOKEN", and "LIBRARIES_ASSEMBLY_NAME_PREFIX".
  (Contributed by David Cournapeau; bpo-4365.)

* The "_winreg" module for accessing the registry now implements the
  "CreateKeyEx()" and "DeleteKeyEx()" functions, extended versions of
  previously supported functions that take several extra arguments.
  The "DisableReflectionKey()", "EnableReflectionKey()", and
  "QueryReflectionKey()" were also tested and documented. (Implemented
  by Brian Curtin: bpo-7347.)

* The new "_beginthreadex()" API is used to start threads, and the
  native thread-local storage functions are now used. (Contributed by
  Kristján Valur Jónsson; bpo-3582.)

* The "os.kill()" function now works on Windows.  The signal value can
  be the constants "CTRL_C_EVENT", "CTRL_BREAK_EVENT", or any integer.
  The first two constants will send "Control-C" and "Control-Break"
  keystroke events to subprocesses; any other value will use the
  "TerminateProcess()" API.  (Contributed by Miki Tebeka;
  bpo-1220212.)

* The "os.listdir()" function now correctly fails for an empty path.
  (Fixed by Hirokazu Yamamoto; bpo-5913.)

* The "mimetypes" module will now read the MIME database from the
  Windows registry when initializing. (Patch by Gabriel Genellina;
  bpo-4969.)


特定于 Mac OS X 的更改：
------------------------

* The path "/Library/Python/2.7/site-packages" is now appended to
  "sys.path", in order to share added packages between the system
  installation and a user-installed copy of the same version. (Changed
  by Ronald Oussoren; bpo-4865.)

  在 2.7.13 版本发生变更: As of 2.7.13, this change was removed.
  "/Library/Python/2.7/site-packages", the site-packages directory
  used by the Apple-supplied system Python 2.7 is no longer appended
  to "sys.path" for user-installed Pythons such as from the python.org
  installers.  As of macOS 10.12, Apple changed how the system site-
  packages directory is configured, which could cause installation of
  pip components, like setuptools, to fail.  Packages installed for
  the system Python will no longer be shared with user-installed
  Pythons. (bpo-28440)


特定于 FreeBSD 的更改：
-----------------------

* FreeBSD 7.1's "SO_SETFIB" constant, used with the "socket()" methods
  "getsockopt()"/"setsockopt()" to select an alternate routing table,
  is now available in the "socket" module.  (Added by Kyle VanderBeek;
  bpo-8235.)


其他的改变和修正
================

* Two benchmark scripts, "iobench" and "ccbench", were added to the
  "Tools" directory.  "iobench" measures the speed of the built-in
  file I/O objects returned by "open()" while performing various
  operations, and "ccbench" is a concurrency benchmark that tries to
  measure computing throughput, thread switching latency, and IO
  processing bandwidth when performing several tasks using a varying
  number of threads.

* The "Tools/i18n/msgfmt.py" script now understands plural forms in
  ".po" files.  (Fixed by Martin von Löwis; bpo-5464.)

* When importing a module from a ".pyc" or ".pyo" file with an
  existing ".py" counterpart, the "co_filename" attributes of the
  resulting code objects are overwritten when the original filename is
  obsolete.  This can happen if the file has been renamed, moved, or
  is accessed through different paths.  (Patch by Ziga Seilnacht and
  Jean-Paul Calderone; bpo-1180193.)

* The "regrtest.py" script now takes a "--randseed=" switch that takes
  an integer that will be used as the random seed for the "-r" option
  that executes tests in random order. The "-r" option also reports
  the seed that was used (Added by Collin Winter.)

* Another "regrtest.py" switch is "-j", which takes an integer
  specifying how many tests run in parallel. This allows reducing the
  total runtime on multi-core machines. This option is compatible with
  several other options, including the "-R" switch which is known to
  produce long runtimes. (Added by Antoine Pitrou, bpo-6152.)  This
  can also be used with a new "-F" switch that runs selected tests in
  a loop until they fail.  (Added by Antoine Pitrou; bpo-7312.)

* When executed as a script, the "py_compile.py" module now accepts
  "'-'" as an argument, which will read standard input for the list of
  filenames to be compiled.  (Contributed by Piotr Ożarowski;
  bpo-8233.)


移植到 Python 2.7
=================

本节列出了先前描述的改变以及可能需要修改你的代码的其他问题修正:

* The "range()" function processes its arguments more consistently; it
  will now call "__int__()" on non-float, non-integer arguments that
  are supplied to it.  (Fixed by Alexander Belopolsky; bpo-1533.)

* The string "format()" method changed the default precision used for
  floating-point and complex numbers from 6 decimal places to 12,
  which matches the precision used by "str()". (Changed by Eric Smith;
  bpo-5920.)

* Because of an optimization for the "with" statement, the special
  methods "__enter__()" and "__exit__()" must belong to the object's
  type, and cannot be directly attached to the object's instance.
  This affects new-style classes (derived from "object") and C
  extension types.  (bpo-6101.)

* Due to a bug in Python 2.6, the *exc_value* parameter to
  "__exit__()" methods was often the string representation of the
  exception, not an instance.  This was fixed in 2.7, so *exc_value*
  will be an instance as expected.  (Fixed by Florent Xicluna;
  bpo-7853.)

* When a restricted set of attributes were set using "__slots__",
  deleting an unset attribute would not raise "AttributeError" as you
  would expect.  Fixed by Benjamin Peterson; bpo-7604.)

在标准库中:

* Operations with "datetime" instances that resulted in a year falling
  outside the supported range didn't always raise "OverflowError".
  Such errors are now checked more carefully and will now raise the
  exception. (Reported by Mark Leander, patch by Anand B. Pillai and
  Alexander Belopolsky; bpo-7150.)

* When using "Decimal" instances with a string's "format()" method,
  the default alignment was previously left-alignment.  This has been
  changed to right-alignment, which might change the output of your
  programs. (Changed by Mark Dickinson; bpo-6857.)

  Comparisons involving a signaling NaN value (or "sNAN") now signal
  "InvalidOperation" instead of silently returning a true or false
  value depending on the comparison operator.  Quiet NaN values (or
  "NaN") are now hashable.  (Fixed by Mark Dickinson; bpo-7279.)

* The "xml.etree.ElementTree" library no longer escapes ampersands and
  angle brackets when outputting an XML processing instruction (which
  looks like "<?xml-stylesheet href="#style1"?>") or comment (which
  looks like "<!-- comment -->"). (Patch by Neil Muller; bpo-2746.)

* The "readline()" method of "StringIO" objects now does nothing when
  a negative length is requested, as other file-like objects do.
  (bpo-7348).

* The "syslog" module will now use the value of "sys.argv[0]" as the
  identifier instead of the previous default value of "'python'".
  (Changed by Sean Reifschneider; bpo-8451.)

* The "tarfile" module's default error handling has changed, to no
  longer suppress fatal errors.  The default error level was
  previously 0, which meant that errors would only result in a message
  being written to the debug log, but because the debug log is not
  activated by default, these errors go unnoticed.  The default error
  level is now 1, which raises an exception if there's an error.
  (Changed by Lars Gustäbel; bpo-7357.)

* The "urlparse" module's "urlsplit()" now handles unknown URL schemes
  in a fashion compliant with **RFC 3986**: if the URL is of the form
  ""<something>://..."", the text before the "://" is treated as the
  scheme, even if it's a made-up scheme that the module doesn't know
  about.  This change may break code that worked around the old
  behaviour.  For example, Python 2.6.4 or 2.5 will return the
  following:

     >>> import urlparse
     >>> urlparse.urlsplit('invented://host/filename?query')
     ('invented', '', '//host/filename?query', '', '')

  Python 2.7 (and Python 2.6.5) will return:

     >>> import urlparse
     >>> urlparse.urlsplit('invented://host/filename?query')
     ('invented', 'host', '/filename?query', '', '')

  (Python 2.7 actually produces slightly different output, since it
  returns a named tuple instead of a standard tuple.)

对于C 扩展模块：

* C extensions that use integer format codes with the "PyArg_Parse*"
  family of functions will now raise a "TypeError" exception instead
  of triggering a "DeprecationWarning" (bpo-5080).

* Use the new "PyOS_string_to_double()" function instead of the old
  "PyOS_ascii_strtod()" and "PyOS_ascii_atof()" functions, which are
  now deprecated.

对于嵌入Python的应用程序：

* The "PySys_SetArgvEx()" function was added, letting applications
  close a security hole when the existing "PySys_SetArgv()" function
  was used.  Check whether you're calling "PySys_SetArgv()" and
  carefully consider whether the application should be using
  "PySys_SetArgvEx()" with *updatepath* set to false.


New Features Added to Python 2.7 Maintenance Releases
=====================================================

New features may be added to Python 2.7 maintenance releases when the
situation genuinely calls for it. Any such additions must go through
the Python Enhancement Proposal process, and make a compelling case
for why they can't be adequately addressed by either adding the new
feature solely to Python 3, or else by publishing it on the Python
Package Index.

In addition to the specific proposals listed below, there is a general
exemption allowing new "-3" warnings to be added in any Python 2.7
maintenance release.


Two new environment variables for debug mode
--------------------------------------------

In debug mode, the "[xxx refs]" statistic is not written by default,
the "PYTHONSHOWREFCOUNT" environment variable now must also be set.
(Contributed by Victor Stinner; bpo-31733.)

When Python is compiled with "COUNT_ALLOC" defined, allocation counts
are no longer dumped by default anymore: the "PYTHONSHOWALLOCCOUNT"
environment variable must now also be set. Moreover, allocation counts
are now dumped into stderr, rather than stdout. (Contributed by Victor
Stinner; bpo-31692.)

在 2.7.15 版本加入.


PEP 434: IDLE Enhancement Exception for All Branches
----------------------------------------------------

**PEP 434** describes a general exemption for changes made to the IDLE
development environment shipped along with Python. This exemption
makes it possible for the IDLE developers to provide a more consistent
user experience across all supported versions of Python 2 and 3.

For details of any IDLE changes, refer to the NEWS file for the
specific release.


PEP 466: 针对 Python 2.7 的网络安全加固
---------------------------------------

**PEP 466** describes a number of network security enhancement
proposals that have been approved for inclusion in Python 2.7
maintenance releases, with the first of those changes appearing in the
Python 2.7.7 release.

**PEP 466** Python 2.7.7 中添加的相关功能：

* "hmac.compare_digest()" was backported from Python 3 to make a
  timing attack resistant comparison operation available to Python 2
  applications. (Contributed by Alex Gaynor; bpo-21306.)

* OpenSSL 1.0.1g was upgraded in the official Windows installers
  published on python.org. (Contributed by Zachary Ware; bpo-21462.)

**PEP 466** Python 2.7.8 中添加的相关功能：

* "hashlib.pbkdf2_hmac()" was backported from Python 3 to make a
  hashing algorithm suitable for secure password storage broadly
  available to Python 2 applications. (Contributed by Alex Gaynor;
  bpo-21304.)

* OpenSSL 1.0.1h was upgraded for the official Windows installers
  published on python.org. (contributed by Zachary Ware in bpo-21671
  for CVE-2014-0224)

**PEP 466** Python 2.7.9 中添加的相关功能：

* Most of Python 3.4's "ssl" module was backported. This means "ssl"
  now supports Server Name Indication, TLS1.x settings, access to the
  platform certificate store, the "SSLContext" class, and other
  features. (Contributed by Alex Gaynor and David Reid; bpo-21308.)

  Refer to the "Version added: 2.7.9" notes in the module
  documentation for specific details.

* "os.urandom()" was changed to cache a file descriptor to
  "/dev/urandom" instead of reopening "/dev/urandom" on every call.
  (Contributed by Alex Gaynor; bpo-21305.)

* "hashlib.algorithms_guaranteed" and "hashlib.algorithms_available"
  were backported from Python 3 to make it easier for Python 2
  applications to select the strongest available hash algorithm.
  (Contributed by Alex Gaynor in bpo-21307)


PEP 477: 将 ensurepip (PEP 453) 向下移植到 Python 2.7
-----------------------------------------------------

**PEP 477** approves the inclusion of the **PEP 453** ensurepip module
and the improved documentation that was enabled by it in the Python
2.7 maintenance releases, appearing first in the Python 2.7.9 release.


默认对 pip 进行初始设置
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The new "ensurepip" module (defined in **PEP 453**) provides a
standard cross-platform mechanism to bootstrap the pip installer into
Python installations. The version of "pip" included with Python 2.7.9
is "pip" 1.5.6, and future 2.7.x maintenance releases will update the
bundled version to the latest version of "pip" that is available at
the time of creating the release candidate.

By default, the commands "pip", "pipX" and "pipX.Y" will be installed
on all platforms (where X.Y stands for the version of the Python
installation), along with the "pip" Python package and its
dependencies.

For CPython source builds on POSIX systems, the "make install" and
"make altinstall" commands do not bootstrap "pip" by default.  This
behaviour can be controlled through configure options, and overridden
through Makefile options.

在 Windows 和 Mac OS X 上，现在 CPython 安装程序默认会将 "pip" 与
CPython 本身一同安装（用户可以在安装过程中选择不安装它）。 Window 用户
需要选择执行 "PATH" 修改以使 "pip" 在命令行中默认可用，在其他情况下它
仍然可以通过 Windows 版 Python 启动器以 "py -m pip" 的方式使用。

正如 在 PEP 中已讨论的，平台打包者可以选择默认不安装这些命令，只需要在
它们被发起调用时，能够提供有关如何在该平台上安装它们的简单清晰的指引（
通常是使用系统包管理器）。


文档更改
~~~~~~~~

作为此项更改的一部分，文档的 安装 Python 模块 和 分发 Python 模块 章节
已经完全重新设计，快速入门和 FAQ 文档也是如此。 大部分打包指南文档现在
都已被移至由 Python Packaging Authority 维护的 Python Packaging User
Guide 以及相应的独立项目文档。

However, as this migration is currently still incomplete, the legacy
versions of those guides remaining available as 安装Python模块（旧版）
and 分发 Python 模块（遗留版本）.

参见:

  **PEP 453** -- Python 安装版中对 pip 的显式初始设置
     PEP 由Donald Stufft 和 Nick Coghlan 撰写，由 Donald Stufft，Nick
     Coghlan，Martin von Löwis 和 Ned Deily 实现。


PEP 476: 默认为 stdlib http 客户端启用证书验证
----------------------------------------------

**PEP 476** updated "httplib" and modules which use it, such as
"urllib2" and "xmlrpclib", to now verify that the server presents a
certificate which is signed by a Certificate Authority in the platform
trust store and whose hostname matches the hostname being requested by
default, significantly improving security for many applications. This
change was made in the Python 2.7.9 release.

对于需要之前版本的旧有行为的应用程序，可以传入一个替代的上下文:

   import urllib2
   import ssl

   # This disables all verification
   context = ssl._create_unverified_context()

   # This allows using a specific certificate for the host, which doesn't need
   # to be in the trust store
   context = ssl.create_default_context(cafile="/path/to/file.crt")

   urllib2.urlopen("https://invalid-cert", context=context)


PEP 493：适用于Python 2.7 的 HTTPS 验证迁移工具
-----------------------------------------------

**PEP 493** provides additional migration tools to support a more
incremental infrastructure upgrade process for environments containing
applications and services relying on the historically permissive
processing of server certificates when establishing client HTTPS
connections.  These additions were made in the Python 2.7.12 release.

These tools are intended for use in cases where affected applications
and services can't be modified to explicitly pass a more permissive
SSL context when establishing the connection.

For applications and services which can't be modified at all, the new
"PYTHONHTTPSVERIFY" environment variable may be set to "0" to revert
an entire Python process back to the default permissive behaviour of
Python 2.7.8 and earlier.

For cases where the connection establishment code can't be modified,
but the overall application can be, the new
"ssl._https_verify_certificates()" function can be used to adjust the
default behaviour at runtime.


新增 "make regen-all" 构建目标
------------------------------

为了简化交叉编译，并确保 CPython 能够可靠地编译而不需要已存在可用的
Python 版本，基于 autotools 的构建系统将不再尝试根据文件修改时间隐式地
重新编译已生成的文件。

取而代之的是，新增了一个 "make regen-all" 命令以便在需要时强制重新生成
这些文件（例如在基于预生成版本构建了 Python 的初始版本之后）。

还定义了其他一些更具选择性的重生成目标 —— 详情参见 Makefile.pre.in。

（由 Victor Stinner 在 bpo-23404 中贡献。）

在 2.7.14 版本加入.


移除了 "make touch" 构建目标
----------------------------

之前用于通过更新生成文件的修改时间来请求隐式的重新生成这些文件的 "make
touch" 构建目标已被移除。

它已被新的 "make regen-all" 目标所替代。

（由 Victor Stinner 在 bpo-23404 中贡献。）

在 2.7.14 版本发生变更.


致谢
====

作者要感谢以下人员为本文的各种草案提供建议，更正和帮助： Nick Coghlan,
Philip Jenvey, Ryan Lovett, R. David Murray, Hugh Secker-Walker.
