I just posted an updated version of PEP 467 after recently finishing the updates to the Python 3.4+ binary sequence docs to decouple them from the str docs.
Key points in the proposal: * deprecate passing integers to bytes() and bytearray() * add bytes.zeros() and bytearray.zeros() as a replacement * add bytes.byte() and bytearray.byte() as counterparts to ord() for binary data * add bytes.iterbytes(), bytearray.iterbytes() and memoryview.iterbytes() As far as I am aware, that last item poses the only open question, with the alternative being to add an "iterbytes" builtin with a definition along the lines of the following: def iterbytes(data): try: getiter = type(data).__iterbytes__ except AttributeError: iter = map(bytes.byte, data) else: iter = getiter(data) return iter Regards, Nick. PEP URL: http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0467/ Full PEP text: ============================= PEP: 467 Title: Minor API improvements for bytes and bytearray Version: $Revision$ Last-Modified: $Date$ Author: Nick Coghlan <ncogh...@gmail.com> Status: Draft Type: Standards Track Content-Type: text/x-rst Created: 2014-03-30 Python-Version: 3.5 Post-History: 2014-03-30 2014-08-15 Abstract ======== During the initial development of the Python 3 language specification, the core ``bytes`` type for arbitrary binary data started as the mutable type that is now referred to as ``bytearray``. Other aspects of operating in the binary domain in Python have also evolved over the course of the Python 3 series. This PEP proposes a number of small adjustments to the APIs of the ``bytes`` and ``bytearray`` types to make it easier to operate entirely in the binary domain. Background ========== To simplify the task of writing the Python 3 documentation, the ``bytes`` and ``bytearray`` types were documented primarily in terms of the way they differed from the Unicode based Python 3 ``str`` type. Even when I `heavily revised the sequence documentation <http://hg.python.org/cpython/rev/463f52d20314>`__ in 2012, I retained that simplifying shortcut. However, it turns out that this approach to the documentation of these types had a problem: it doesn't adequately introduce users to their hybrid nature, where they can be manipulated *either* as a "sequence of integers" type, *or* as ``str``-like types that assume ASCII compatible data. That oversight has now been corrected, with the binary sequence types now being documented entirely independently of the ``str`` documentation in `Python 3.4+ <https://docs.python.org/3/library/stdtypes.html#binary-sequence-types-bytes-bytearray-memoryview>`__ The confusion isn't just a documentation issue, however, as there are also some lingering design quirks from an earlier pre-release design where there was *no* separate ``bytearray`` type, and instead the core ``bytes`` type was mutable (with no immutable counterpart). Finally, additional experience with using the existing Python 3 binary sequence types in real world applications has suggested it would be beneficial to make it easier to convert integers to length 1 bytes objects. Proposals ========= As a "consistency improvement" proposal, this PEP is actually about a few smaller micro-proposals, each aimed at improving the usability of the binary data model in Python 3. Proposals are motivated by one of two main factors: * removing remnants of the original design of ``bytes`` as a mutable type * allowing users to easily convert integer values to a length 1 ``bytes`` object Alternate Constructors ---------------------- The ``bytes`` and ``bytearray`` constructors currently accept an integer argument, but interpret it to mean a zero-filled object of the given length. This is a legacy of the original design of ``bytes`` as a mutable type, rather than a particularly intuitive behaviour for users. It has become especially confusing now that some other ``bytes`` interfaces treat integers and the corresponding length 1 bytes instances as equivalent input. Compare:: >>> b"\x03" in bytes([1, 2, 3]) True >>> 3 in bytes([1, 2, 3]) True >>> bytes(b"\x03") b'\x03' >>> bytes(3) b'\x00\x00\x00' This PEP proposes that the current handling of integers in the bytes and bytearray constructors by deprecated in Python 3.5 and targeted for removal in Python 3.7, being replaced by two more explicit alternate constructors provided as class methods. The initial python-ideas thread [ideas-thread1]_ that spawned this PEP was specifically aimed at deprecating this constructor behaviour. Firstly, a ``byte`` constructor is proposed that converts integers in the range 0 to 255 (inclusive) to a ``bytes`` object:: >>> bytes.byte(3) b'\x03' >>> bytearray.byte(3) bytearray(b'\x03') >>> bytes.byte(512) Traceback (most recent call last): File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module> ValueError: bytes must be in range(0, 256) One specific use case for this alternate constructor is to easily convert the result of indexing operations on ``bytes`` and other binary sequences from an integer to a ``bytes`` object. The documentation for this API should note that its counterpart for the reverse conversion is ``ord()``. The ``ord()`` documentation will also be updated to note that while ``chr()`` is the counterpart for ``str`` input, ``bytes.byte`` and ``bytearray.byte`` are the counterparts for binary input. Secondly, a ``zeros`` constructor is proposed that serves as a direct replacement for the current constructor behaviour, rather than having to use sequence repetition to achieve the same effect in a less intuitive way:: >>> bytes.zeros(3) b'\x00\x00\x00' >>> bytearray.zeros(3) bytearray(b'\x00\x00\x00') The chosen name here is taken from the corresponding initialisation function in NumPy (although, as these are sequence types rather than N-dimensional matrices, the constructors take a length as input rather than a shape tuple) While ``bytes.byte`` and ``bytearray.zeros`` are expected to be the more useful duo amongst the new constructors, ``bytes.zeros`` and `bytearray.byte`` are provided in order to maintain API consistency between the two types. Iteration --------- While iteration over ``bytes`` objects and other binary sequences produces integers, it is sometimes desirable to iterate over length 1 bytes objects instead. To handle this situation more obviously (and more efficiently) than would be the case with the ``map(bytes.byte, data)`` construct enabled by the above constructor changes, this PEP proposes the addition of a new ``iterbytes`` method to ``bytes``, ``bytearray`` and ``memoryview``:: for x in data.iterbytes(): # x is a length 1 ``bytes`` object, rather than an integer Third party types and arbitrary containers of integers that lack the new method can still be handled by combining ``map`` with the new ``bytes.byte()`` alternate constructor proposed above:: for x in map(bytes.byte, data): # x is a length 1 ``bytes`` object, rather than an integer # This works with *any* container of integers in the range # 0 to 255 inclusive Open questions ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ * The fallback case above suggests that this could perhaps be better handled as an ``iterbytes(data)`` *builtin*, that used ``data.__iterbytes__()`` if defined, but otherwise fell back to ``map(bytes.byte, data)``:: for x in iterbytes(data): # x is a length 1 ``bytes`` object, rather than an integer # This works with *any* container of integers in the range # 0 to 255 inclusive References ========== .. [ideas-thread1] https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-ideas/2014-March/027295.html .. [empty-buffer-issue] http://bugs.python.org/issue20895 .. [GvR-initial-feedback] https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-ideas/2014-March/027376.html Copyright ========= This document has been placed in the public domain. -- Nick Coghlan | ncogh...@gmail.com | Brisbane, Australia _______________________________________________ Python-Dev mailing list Python-Dev@python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-dev Unsubscribe: https://mail.python.org/mailman/options/python-dev/archive%40mail-archive.com