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391 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
===================
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Porting to Python 3
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===================
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Django 1.5 is the first version of Django to support Python 3. The same code
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runs both on Python 2 (≥ 2.6.5) and Python 3 (≥ 3.2), thanks to the six_
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compatibility layer.
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.. _six: https://pythonhosted.org/six/
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This document is primarily targeted at authors of pluggable applications
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who want to support both Python 2 and 3. It also describes guidelines that
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apply to Django's code.
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Philosophy
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==========
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This document assumes that you are familiar with the changes between Python 2
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and Python 3. If you aren't, read :ref:`Python's official porting guide
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<pyporting-howto>` first. Refreshing your knowledge of unicode handling on
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Python 2 and 3 will help; the `Pragmatic Unicode`_ presentation is a good
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resource.
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Django uses the *Python 2/3 Compatible Source* strategy. Of course, you're
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free to chose another strategy for your own code, especially if you don't need
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to stay compatible with Python 2. But authors of pluggable applications are
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encouraged to use the same porting strategy as Django itself.
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Writing compatible code is much easier if you target Python ≥ 2.6. Django 1.5
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introduces compatibility tools such as :mod:`django.utils.six`, which is a
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customized version of the :mod:`six module <six>`. For convenience,
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forwards-compatible aliases were introduced in Django 1.4.2. If your
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application takes advantage of these tools, it will require Django ≥ 1.4.2.
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Obviously, writing compatible source code adds some overhead, and that can
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cause frustration. Django's developers have found that attempting to write
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Python 3 code that's compatible with Python 2 is much more rewarding than the
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opposite. Not only does that make your code more future-proof, but Python 3's
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advantages (like the saner string handling) start shining quickly. Dealing
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with Python 2 becomes a backwards compatibility requirement, and we as
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developers are used to dealing with such constraints.
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Porting tools provided by Django are inspired by this philosophy, and it's
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reflected throughout this guide.
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.. _Pragmatic Unicode: http://nedbatchelder.com/text/unipain.html
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Porting tips
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============
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Unicode literals
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----------------
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This step consists in:
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- Adding ``from __future__ import unicode_literals`` at the top of your Python
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modules -- it's best to put it in each and every module, otherwise you'll
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keep checking the top of your files to see which mode is in effect;
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- Removing the ``u`` prefix before unicode strings;
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- Adding a ``b`` prefix before bytestrings.
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Performing these changes systematically guarantees backwards compatibility.
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However, Django applications generally don't need bytestrings, since Django
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only exposes unicode interfaces to the programmer. Python 3 discourages using
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bytestrings, except for binary data or byte-oriented interfaces. Python 2
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makes bytestrings and unicode strings effectively interchangeable, as long as
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they only contain ASCII data. Take advantage of this to use unicode strings
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wherever possible and avoid the ``b`` prefixes.
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.. note::
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Python 2's ``u`` prefix is a syntax error in Python 3.2 but it will be
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allowed again in Python 3.3 thanks to :pep:`414`. Thus, this
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transformation is optional if you target Python ≥ 3.3. It's still
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recommended, per the "write Python 3 code" philosophy.
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String handling
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---------------
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Python 2's `unicode`_ type was renamed :class:`str` in Python 3,
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``str()`` was renamed :class:`bytes`, and `basestring`_ disappeared.
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six_ provides :ref:`tools <string-handling-with-six>` to deal with these
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changes.
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Django also contains several string related classes and functions in the
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:mod:`django.utils.encoding` and :mod:`django.utils.safestring` modules. Their
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names used the words ``str``, which doesn't mean the same thing in Python 2
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and Python 3, and ``unicode``, which doesn't exist in Python 3. In order to
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avoid ambiguity and confusion these concepts were renamed ``bytes`` and
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``text``.
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Here are the name changes in :mod:`django.utils.encoding`:
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================== ==================
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Old name New name
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================== ==================
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``smart_str`` ``smart_bytes``
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``smart_unicode`` ``smart_text``
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``force_unicode`` ``force_text``
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================== ==================
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For backwards compatibility, the old names still work on Python 2. Under
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Python 3, ``smart_str`` is an alias for ``smart_text``.
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For forwards compatibility, the new names work as of Django 1.4.2.
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.. note::
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:mod:`django.utils.encoding` was deeply refactored in Django 1.5 to
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provide a more consistent API. Check its documentation for more
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information.
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:mod:`django.utils.safestring` is mostly used via the
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:func:`~django.utils.safestring.mark_safe` function, which didn't change. In
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case you're using the internals, here are the name changes:
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================== ==================
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Old name New name
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================== ==================
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``SafeString`` ``SafeBytes``
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``SafeUnicode`` ``SafeText``
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================== ==================
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For backwards compatibility, the old names still work on Python 2. On Python 3,
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``SafeString`` is an alias for ``SafeText``.
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For forwards compatibility, the new names work as of Django 1.4.2.
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``__str__()`` and ``__unicode__()`` methods
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-------------------------------------------
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In Python 2, the object model specifies :meth:`~object.__str__` and
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` __unicode__()`_ methods. If these methods exist, they must return
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``str`` (bytes) and ``unicode`` (text) respectively.
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The ``print`` statement and the :class:`str` built-in call
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:meth:`~object.__str__` to determine the human-readable representation of an
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object. The ``unicode`` built-in calls ` __unicode__()`_ if it
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exists, and otherwise falls back to :meth:`~object.__str__` and decodes the
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result with the system encoding. Conversely, the
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:class:`~django.db.models.Model` base class automatically derives
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:meth:`~object.__str__` from ` __unicode__()`_ by encoding to UTF-8.
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In Python 3, there's simply :meth:`~object.__str__`, which must return ``str``
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(text).
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(It is also possible to define :meth:`~object.__bytes__`, but Django applications
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have little use for that method, because they hardly ever deal with ``bytes``.)
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Django provides a simple way to define :meth:`~object.__str__` and
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` __unicode__()`_ methods that work on Python 2 and 3: you must
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define a :meth:`~object.__str__` method returning text and to apply the
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:func:`~django.utils.encoding.python_2_unicode_compatible` decorator.
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On Python 3, the decorator is a no-op. On Python 2, it defines appropriate
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` __unicode__()`_ and :meth:`~object.__str__` methods (replacing the
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original :meth:`~object.__str__` method in the process). Here's an example::
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from __future__ import unicode_literals
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from django.utils.encoding import python_2_unicode_compatible
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@python_2_unicode_compatible
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class MyClass(object):
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def __str__(self):
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return "Instance of my class"
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This technique is the best match for Django's porting philosophy.
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For forwards compatibility, this decorator is available as of Django 1.4.2.
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Finally, note that :meth:`~object.__repr__` must return a ``str`` on all
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versions of Python.
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:class:`dict` and :class:`dict`-like classes
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--------------------------------------------
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:meth:`dict.keys`, :meth:`dict.items` and :meth:`dict.values` return lists in
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Python 2 and iterators in Python 3. :class:`~django.http.QueryDict` and the
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:class:`dict`-like classes defined in ``django.utils.datastructures``
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behave likewise in Python 3.
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six_ provides compatibility functions to work around this change:
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:func:`~six.iterkeys`, :func:`~six.iteritems`, and :func:`~six.itervalues`.
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It also contains an undocumented ``iterlists`` function that works well for
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``django.utils.datastructures.MultiValueDict`` and its subclasses.
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:class:`~django.http.HttpRequest` and :class:`~django.http.HttpResponse` objects
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--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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According to :pep:`3333`:
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- headers are always ``str`` objects,
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- input and output streams are always ``bytes`` objects.
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Specifically, :attr:`HttpResponse.content <django.http.HttpResponse.content>`
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contains ``bytes``, which may become an issue if you compare it with a
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``str`` in your tests. The preferred solution is to rely on
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:meth:`~django.test.SimpleTestCase.assertContains` and
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:meth:`~django.test.SimpleTestCase.assertNotContains`. These methods accept a
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response and a unicode string as arguments.
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Coding guidelines
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=================
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The following guidelines are enforced in Django's source code. They're also
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recommended for third-party applications that follow the same porting strategy.
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Syntax requirements
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-------------------
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Unicode
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~~~~~~~
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In Python 3, all strings are considered Unicode by default. The ``unicode``
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type from Python 2 is called ``str`` in Python 3, and ``str`` becomes
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``bytes``.
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You mustn't use the ``u`` prefix before a unicode string literal because it's
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a syntax error in Python 3.2. You must prefix byte strings with ``b``.
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In order to enable the same behavior in Python 2, every module must import
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``unicode_literals`` from ``__future__``::
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from __future__ import unicode_literals
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my_string = "This is an unicode literal"
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my_bytestring = b"This is a bytestring"
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If you need a byte string literal under Python 2 and a unicode string literal
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under Python 3, use the :class:`str` builtin::
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str('my string')
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In Python 3, there aren't any automatic conversions between ``str`` and
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``bytes``, and the :mod:`codecs` module became more strict. :meth:`str.encode`
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always returns ``bytes``, and ``bytes.decode`` always returns ``str``. As a
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consequence, the following pattern is sometimes necessary::
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value = value.encode('ascii', 'ignore').decode('ascii')
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Be cautious if you have to `index bytestrings`_.
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.. _index bytestrings: https://docs.python.org/3/howto/pyporting.html#text-versus-binary-data
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Exceptions
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~~~~~~~~~~
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When you capture exceptions, use the ``as`` keyword::
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try:
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...
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except MyException as exc:
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...
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This older syntax was removed in Python 3::
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try:
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...
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except MyException, exc: # Don't do that!
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...
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The syntax to reraise an exception with a different traceback also changed.
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Use :func:`six.reraise`.
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Magic methods
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-------------
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Use the patterns below to handle magic methods renamed in Python 3.
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Iterators
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~~~~~~~~~
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::
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class MyIterator(six.Iterator):
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def __iter__(self):
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return self # implement some logic here
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def __next__(self):
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raise StopIteration # implement some logic here
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Boolean evaluation
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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::
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class MyBoolean(object):
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def __bool__(self):
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return True # implement some logic here
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def __nonzero__(self): # Python 2 compatibility
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return type(self).__bool__(self)
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Division
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~~~~~~~~
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::
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class MyDivisible(object):
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def __truediv__(self, other):
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return self / other # implement some logic here
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def __div__(self, other): # Python 2 compatibility
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return type(self).__truediv__(self, other)
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def __itruediv__(self, other):
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return self // other # implement some logic here
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def __idiv__(self, other): # Python 2 compatibility
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return type(self).__itruediv__(self, other)
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Special methods are looked up on the class and not on the instance to reflect
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the behavior of the Python interpreter.
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.. module: django.utils.six
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Writing compatible code with six
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--------------------------------
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six_ is the canonical compatibility library for supporting Python 2 and 3 in
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a single codebase. Read its documentation!
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A :mod:`customized version of six <django.utils.six>` is bundled with Django
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as of version 1.4.2. You can import it as ``django.utils.six``.
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Here are the most common changes required to write compatible code.
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.. _string-handling-with-six:
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String handling
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The ``basestring`` and ``unicode`` types were removed in Python 3, and the
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meaning of ``str`` changed. To test these types, use the following idioms::
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isinstance(myvalue, six.string_types) # replacement for basestring
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isinstance(myvalue, six.text_type) # replacement for unicode
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isinstance(myvalue, bytes) # replacement for str
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Python ≥ 2.6 provides ``bytes`` as an alias for ``str``, so you don't need
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:data:`six.binary_type`.
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``long``
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~~~~~~~~
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The ``long`` type no longer exists in Python 3. ``1L`` is a syntax error. Use
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:data:`six.integer_types` check if a value is an integer or a long::
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isinstance(myvalue, six.integer_types) # replacement for (int, long)
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``xrange``
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~~~~~~~~~~
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If you use ``xrange`` on Python 2, import ``six.moves.range`` and use that
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instead. You can also import ``six.moves.xrange`` (it's equivalent to
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``six.moves.range``) but the first technique allows you to simply drop the
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import when dropping support for Python 2.
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Moved modules
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Some modules were renamed in Python 3. The ``django.utils.six.moves``
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module (based on the :mod:`six.moves module <six.moves>`) provides a
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compatible location to import them.
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``PY2``
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~~~~~~~
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If you need different code in Python 2 and Python 3, check :data:`six.PY2`::
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if six.PY2:
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# compatibility code for Python 2
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This is a last resort solution when :mod:`six` doesn't provide an appropriate
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function.
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.. module:: django.utils.six
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Django customized version of ``six``
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------------------------------------
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The version of six bundled with Django (``django.utils.six``) includes a few
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customizations for internal use only.
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.. _unicode: https://docs.python.org/2/library/functions.html#unicode
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.. _ __unicode__(): https://docs.python.org/2/reference/datamodel.html#object.__unicode__
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.. _basestring: https://docs.python.org/2/library/functions.html#basestring
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