This is the sixth status update about our work on the py3k branch, which we
can work on thanks to all of the people who donated to the py3k proposal.
The coolest news is not about what we did in the past weeks, but what we will
do in the next: I am pleased to announce that Philip Jenvey has been
selected by the PyPy communitiy to be funded for his upcoming work on py3k,
thanks to your generous donations. He will start to work on it shortly, and he
will surely help the branch to make faster progress. I am also particularly
happy of this because Philip is the first non-core developer who is getting
paid with donations: he demonstrated over the past months to be able to work
effectively on PyPy, and so we were happy to approve his application for the
job. This means that anyone can potentially be selected in the future, the
only strict requirement is to have a deep interest in working on PyPy and to
prove to be able to do so by contributing to the project.
Back to the status of the branch. Most of the work since the last status
update has been done in the area of, guess what? Unicode strings. As usual,
this is one of the most important changes between Python 2 and Python 3, so
it's not surprising. The biggest news is that now PyPy internally supports
unicode identifiers (such as names of variables, functions, attributes, etc.),
whereas earlier it supported only ASCII bytes strings. The changes is still
barely visible from the outside, because the parser still rejects non-ASCII
identifiers, however you can see it with a bit of creativity:
>>>> def foo(x): pass >>>> foo(**{'àèìòù': 42}) Traceback (most recent call last): File "<console>", line 1, in <module> TypeError: foo() got an unexpected keyword argument 'àèìòù'
Before the latest changes, you used to get question marks instead of the
proper name for the keyword argument. Although this might seem like a small
detail, it is a big step towards a proper working Python 3 interpreter and it
required a couple of days of headaches. A spin-off of this work is that now
RPython has better built-in support for unicode (also in the default branch):
for example, it now supports unicode string formatting (using the percent
operator) and the methods .encode/.decode('utf-8').
Other than that there is the usual list of smaller issues and bugs that got
fixed, including (but not limited to):
- teach the compiler when to emit the new opcode DELETE_DEREF (and
implement it!)- detect when we use spaces and TABs inconsistently in the source code, as
CPython does- fix yet another bug related to the new lexically scoped exceptions (this
is the last one, hopefully)- port some of the changes that we did to the standard CPython 2.7 tests to
3.2, to mark those which are implementation details and should not be run on
PyPy
Finally, I would like to thank Amaury Forgeot d'Arc and Ariel Ben-Yehuda for
their work on the branch; among other things, Amaury recently worked on
cpyext and on the PyPy _cffi_backend, while Ariel submitted a patch to
implement PEP 3138.
7 comments:
Following your work, great to see progress!
Python 3.3 has some absolutely crucial fixes (finally! to Unicode). I'd go as far as to say that Python 3.3 is the first Pyton version of all that is truly suitable for the full range of internationalized apps. So I wonder a bit about the set target for the PyPy3 work being 3.2. Any chance it can be 3.2 with the 3.3 Unicode implementation?
we chose to target 3.2 because at the time 3.3 was a moving target. Now we could indeed decide to retarget 3.3, but I'm not sure it's a good idea. There is still a lot of work to be done for 3.2, and adding more features would only shift the end to later.
I know this might be an odd request but... Has the pypy team ever considered inquiring Mozilla about embedding pypy into their browser? I say this because Google is embedding a vm from chromium to support dart. I do not think this is ideal for an open web. Pypy, on the other hand, would be ideal as an open web vm! Think about it!
Nice article, thanks for the information.
That sounds great!
Thank you for your work - and for keeping us up to date!
I think main change in 3.3 is that they allow u'' as syntax for indicating a string (just inactive syntax for easing the porting of python2 code: '' is exactly equal to u'').
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