mirror of https://github.com/python/cpython.git
38fd5b6413
Note a curious extension to the std C rules: x, X and o formatting can never produce a sign character in C, so the '+' and ' ' flags are meaningless for them. But unbounded ints *can* produce a sign character under these conversions (no fixed- width bitstring is wide enough to hold all negative values in 2's-comp form). So these flags become meaningful in Python when formatting a Python long which is too big to fit in a C long. This required shuffling around existing code, which hacked x and X conversions to death when both the '#' and '0' flags were specified: the hacks weren't strong enough to deal with the simultaneous possibility of the ' ' or '+' flags too, since signs were always meaningless before for x and X conversions. Isomorphic shuffling was required in unicodeobject.c. Also added dozens of non-trivial new unbounded-int test cases to test_format.py. |
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.. | ||
.cvsignore | ||
Makefile.in | ||
abstract.c | ||
bufferobject.c | ||
classobject.c | ||
cobject.c | ||
complexobject.c | ||
dictobject.c | ||
fileobject.c | ||
floatobject.c | ||
frameobject.c | ||
funcobject.c | ||
intobject.c | ||
listobject.c | ||
longobject.c | ||
methodobject.c | ||
moduleobject.c | ||
object.c | ||
rangeobject.c | ||
sliceobject.c | ||
stringobject.c | ||
tupleobject.c | ||
typeobject.c | ||
unicodectype.c | ||
unicodeobject.c | ||
xxobject.c |