Issue3693
Created on 2008-08-27 01:51 by tjreedy, last changed 2008-08-27 01:51 by tjreedy.
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| msg72004 (view) | Author: Terry J. Reedy (tjreedy) | Date: 2008-08-27 01:51 | |
In 2.5
>>> import array
>>> a = array.array('b', 'fox')
>>>
In 3.0
>>> import array
>>> a = array.array('b', 'fox')
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<pyshell#2>", line 1, in <module>
a = array.array('b', 'fox')
TypeError: an integer is required
This puzzled me because an integer argument most certainly is not
allowed (one would raise other exceptions.) Then I realized that 'an
integer' here actually means 'an iterator producing integers' or more
exactly, 'an iterable whose iterator yields integers in the range
implied by the type code'. What I would like to see is something like
TypeError: for typecode 'b', the optional initializer must be an
iterable of 1 byte integers (such as bytes).
I would also like to see a minor change in the array and array.array
docstrings. Array.__doc__ lists the typecodes, array.array.__doc__
lists all the other info needed, so that help(array) gives everything
while help(array.array) omits the needed typecode info. So I would like
to see the typecode info moved to the class docstring with everything
else (and replaced by 'Defines one class: array') so help(array) and
help(array.array) would both give all needed info.
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| History | |||
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| Date | User | Action | Args |
| 2008-08-27 01:51:34 | tjreedy | create | |