From 9fff496394dcd94c4084694ca96a5e07ab836274 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: yum Date: Mon, 23 Jan 2023 14:28:53 -0800 Subject: package.ps1 now fetches all dependencies Don't literally check in Python since it looks dodgy (rightfully so). Instead the build script just fetches it. * Update README, simplifying language and documenting other projects --- .../future-0.18.2/docs/futurize_overview.rst | 55 ---------------------- 1 file changed, 55 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 FOSS/Python/Dependencies/future-0.18.2/docs/futurize_overview.rst (limited to 'FOSS/Python/Dependencies/future-0.18.2/docs/futurize_overview.rst') diff --git a/FOSS/Python/Dependencies/future-0.18.2/docs/futurize_overview.rst b/FOSS/Python/Dependencies/future-0.18.2/docs/futurize_overview.rst deleted file mode 100644 index 769b65c..0000000 --- a/FOSS/Python/Dependencies/future-0.18.2/docs/futurize_overview.rst +++ /dev/null @@ -1,55 +0,0 @@ -The ``futurize`` script passes Python 2 code through all the appropriate fixers -to turn it into valid Python 3 code, and then adds ``__future__`` and -``future`` package imports to re-enable compatibility with Python 2. - -For example, running ``futurize`` turns this Python 2 code: - -.. code-block:: python - - import ConfigParser # Py2 module name - - class Upper(object): - def __init__(self, iterable): - self._iter = iter(iterable) - def next(self): # Py2-style iterator interface - return next(self._iter).upper() - def __iter__(self): - return self - - itr = Upper('hello') - print next(itr), - for letter in itr: - print letter, # Py2-style print statement - -into this code which runs on both Py2 and Py3: - -.. code-block:: python - - from __future__ import print_function - from future import standard_library - standard_library.install_aliases() - from future.builtins import next - from future.builtins import object - import configparser # Py3-style import - - class Upper(object): - def __init__(self, iterable): - self._iter = iter(iterable) - def __next__(self): # Py3-style iterator interface - return next(self._iter).upper() - def __iter__(self): - return self - - itr = Upper('hello') - print(next(itr), end=' ') # Py3-style print function - for letter in itr: - print(letter, end=' ') - - -To write out all the changes to your Python files that ``futurize`` suggests, -use the ``-w`` flag. - -For complex projects, it is probably best to divide the porting into two stages. -Stage 1 is for "safe" changes that modernize the code but do not break Python -2.7 compatibility or introduce a dependency on the ``future`` package. Stage 2 -is to complete the process. -- cgit v1.2.3