William Pickard added the comment:
Python 3.9 does not support Windows 7, it's explicitly stated in the release
notes of 3.9.0
--
nosy: +WildCard65
___
Python tracker
<https://bugs.python.org/is
William Pickard added the comment:
This line is the cause of your issue: "new_cls: SingletonMeta =
cast(SingletonMeta, type(name, bases, namespace))"
More specifically, your call to type() actually erases all information about
your meta class. If you did "type(S)", you
William Pickard added the comment:
Actually, the problem is independent of the value of "shell", the __repr__
function from the initial PR that introduced it expects "args" to be a sequence
and converts it to a list.
William Pickard added the comment:
Python, when installed for all users, installs to %ProgramFiles% (or
%ProgramFiles(x86)% for 32-bit version on 64-bit Windows).
The %LocalAppData% install is just for you... you didn't install it for
everyone or you didn't provide Pytho
William Pickard added the comment:
Do you mind ticking the box, "Run as Administrator" in the Compatibility tab
for python.exe and try winreg again?
--
nosy: +WildCard65
___
Python tracker
<https://bugs.python.o
William Pickard added the comment:
Here's something you should know about Windows, even if a local account is in
the Administrators group, it still has restrictions on what it can do, it just
has the power to elevate itself without requiring login credentials (VIA UAC
prompts).
This
William Pickard added the comment:
I'm quite familiar with MSVC's command line and I'm quite confused on what you
mean "the above commands are specific to 32-bit Python"
"/LD" is available for both 32-bit and 64-bit compilations, it implies "/MT&qu
William Pickard added the comment:
Then it appears you're using a version of the compiler that is built for
building 32-bit exes/dlls, you need to use the x64 version.
For this you need to start either the x86 Cross Tools console or the x64 native
console (VS 2019) or use vcvarsal
William Pickard added the comment:
Correction: You can use either VsDevCmd.bat/Enter-VsDevShell on VS versions
that provide them (2017 and 2019 are known to include it), but to get the x64
tools you need to pass command line arguments (They default to x86 native
tools).
Otherwise you must
William Pickard added the comment:
This is not a bug but a side-affect at how defaulted parameters are stored. The
rule of thumb is to never use mutable values as default values for parameters.
When a method is created in the Python runtime, it checks if the signature has
defaulted keyword
William Pickard added the comment:
MSVC by default disables method inlining (/Ob0) when '/Od' is specified on the
command line while the optimization options specify '/Ob2'.
--
___
Python tracker
<https://bug
William Pickard added the comment:
You may need to inject a LoadLibraryExW detour into your python runtime before
_jpype is loaded and output all the library names its requesting.
You may need to detour all Load
Library functions for maximum coverage.
--
nosy: +WildCard65
William Pickard added the comment:
https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/project/detours/
--
___
Python tracker
<https://bugs.python.org/issue42529>
___
___
William Pickard added the comment:
I was just expecting only detours for LoadLibraryExW (and variants) to find out
which dll failed.
--
___
Python tracker
<https://bugs.python.org/issue42
William Pickard added the comment:
Msvcp140.dll from what I can find is part of the VS 2015 Redstributable package.
--
___
Python tracker
<https://bugs.python.org/issue42
William Pickard added the comment:
I recommend first doing a capture of these functions first, incase Windows is
routing some through them:
LoadLibrary(Ex)(W|A)
W is the Unicode variant while A is the Ascii variant.
--
___
Python tracker
<ht
William Pickard added the comment:
Jumping in here to explain why '__class' doesn't crash when '__sizeof__' does:
When '__class__' is fetched, it returns a new reference to the object's type.
When '__sizeof__' is fetched on the
William Pickard added the comment:
That quick flash would be your terminal window if I have to guess (based on no
Mac experience, but Windows).
--
nosy: +WildCard65
___
Python tracker
<https://bugs.python.org/issue43
William Pickard added the comment:
This feels like it's more of an issue with the C++ compiler you're using. (I
can tell it's C++ because of template syntax)
--
nosy: +WildCard65
___
Python tracker
<https://bugs.pyt
William Pickard added the comment:
I'll get to it Saturday.
--
___
Python tracker
<https://bugs.python.org/issue25095>
___
___
Python-bugs-list m
William Pickard added the comment:
I've made the changes you've requested.
--
___
Python tracker
<https://bugs.python.org/issue25095>
___
___
Python-b
New submission from William Pickard :
Here's the verbose stack trace of the failing test:
==
FAIL: test_index (test.test_array.LargeArrayTest)
--
Trac
William Pickard added the comment:
The only modification I made was to "rt.bat" to have the value of '-u' work
properly.
--
___
Python tracker
<https://bug
Change by William Pickard :
--
keywords: +patch
pull_requests: +20240
stage: -> patch review
pull_request: https://github.com/python/cpython/pull/21071
___
Python tracker
<https://bugs.python.org/issu
Change by William Pickard :
--
resolution: -> fixed
stage: patch review -> resolved
status: open -> closed
___
Python tracker
<https://bugs.python.or
New submission from William Pickard :
When the GC module goes to collect objects (most notably, during Python
shutdown), it makes a call to subtract_refs on the GC container.
During this invocation, it creates a local variable "op" who's value is the
result of 'FROM_GC(gc
New submission from William Pickard :
The initconfig API functions "PyPreConfig_InitPythonConfig" and
"PyPreConfig_InitIsolatedConfig" are mistakenly documented for the other method.
--
assignee: docs@python
components: Documentation
messages: 372531
nosy: Wil
Change by William Pickard :
--
title: [easy Doc] "PyPreConfig_InitIsolatedConfig" and
"PyPreConfig_InitPythonConfig" are given opposite documentation. -> [easy Doc]
"PyPreConfig_InitIsolatedConfig" and "PyPreConfig_InitPythonConfig&qu
New submission from William Pickard :
The current goal from what I can tell for Python is to have all C based modules
move away from static types and instead use "PyType_FromSpec" and the variant
that specifies base classes.
The only problem is, PyType_FromSpec and it's va
William Pickard added the comment:
Another thing I thought of, if this is accepted, we can turn the "PyType"
methods into header static inline methods.
--
___
Python tracker
<https://bugs.python.o
Change by William Pickard :
--
keywords: +patch
pull_requests: +20390
stage: -> patch review
pull_request: https://github.com/python/cpython/pull/21238
___
Python tracker
<https://bugs.python.org/issu
Change by William Pickard :
--
resolution: -> fixed
stage: -> resolved
status: open -> closed
___
Python tracker
<https://bugs.python.org/issue41153>
___
___
Change by William Pickard :
--
nosy: +WildCard65
nosy_count: 9.0 -> 10.0
pull_requests: +20410
pull_request: https://github.com/python/cpython/pull/21262
___
Python tracker
<https://bugs.python.org/issu
New submission from William Pickard :
The goal of issue 39573 is to make "PyObject" and opaque structure in the
limited API.
To do that, a few mandatory changes will be required to CPython in order to
allow for seamless implementation.
Namely:
1) User types need to get away fro
Change by William Pickard :
--
keywords: +patch
pull_requests: +20415
stage: -> patch review
pull_request: https://github.com/python/cpython/pull/21262
___
Python tracker
<https://bugs.python.org/issu
New submission from William Pickard :
Currently within Python, the attribute '__qualname__' is restricted to only be
a string valued attribute.
This makes is rather cumbersome for anyone who wants to implement
'__qualname__' as a property, instead of a plain attr
New submission from William Pickard :
Since Visual Studio 2017, Microsoft has an optional C++ Desktop Development
option for compiling C/C++ code with LLVM's Clang compiler.
It's called: Clang with Microsoft CodeGen.
While the code is parsed with LLVM's Clang parser, the co
William Pickard added the comment:
Note: Apparently Google-OpenID login button created a seperate account...
instead of finding this one.
--
nosy: +WildCard65 -William Pickard
___
Python tracker
<https://bugs.python.org/issue41
William Pickard added the comment:
I think on Windows, the Python Launcher is a separate install entity.
You can verify this under Control Panel -> Uninstall Program and Features.
--
nosy: +WildCard65
___
Python tracker
<https://bugs.pyth
William Pickard added the comment:
Try what's explained here:
https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/help/2438651/how-to-troubleshoot-windows-installer-errors
--
nosy: +WildCard65
___
Python tracker
<https://bugs.python.org/is
William Pickard added the comment:
In the lru_cache example, I think property is using the result of
'lru_cache(c)', which in turns returns a property instance, not a subtype
instance.
--
nosy: +WildCard65
___
Python track
New submission from William Pickard :
Running Python's '--help' argument yields some corrupted text:
"-X dev: enable CPythonâ?Ts â?odevelopment modeâ??, introducing additional
runtime"
--
components: Interpreter Core
messages: 375204
nosy: WildCard65
priority
William Pickard added the comment:
Another thing to note Raymond, as I stated before, example C is, from an
external context, is a plain property object who's "fget" attribute is an
instance of whatever "lru_cache" returns.
isinstance won't be able to differe
Change by William Pickard :
--
resolution: -> fixed
stage: patch review -> resolved
status: open -> closed
___
Python tracker
<https://bugs.python.or
Change by William Pickard :
--
nosy: -WildCard65
___
Python tracker
<https://bugs.python.org/issue24427>
___
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William Pickard added the comment:
You did just necro a 5 year old bug report...
--
nosy: +WildCard65
___
Python tracker
<https://bugs.python.org/issue24
William Pickard added the comment:
Actually, this is an issue with native types in general that define a 'tp_new'
slot value ('!= NULL').
--
nosy: +WildCard65
___
Python tracker
<https://bug
William Pickard added the comment:
Ok, I found another way to apply the solution to this issue, that is by adding
the "Connection" header (with value of "close") to the client's request instead
of the server's response.
I'm going to use this other method
William Pickard added the comment:
Alright, the PR is ready for review.
--
___
Python tracker
<https://bugs.python.org/issue25095>
___
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Python-bugs-list mailin
Change by William Pickard :
--
versions: +Python 3.6, Python 3.7, Python 3.8
___
Python tracker
<https://bugs.python.org/issue25095>
___
___
Python-bugs-list m
New submission from William Pickard :
The distutils module _findvs is failing on my Windows 10 PRO machine with the
following error: OSError: Error 80070002
Note: Building Python 3.6 in debug for some reason doesn't cause the error.
--
components: Distutils, Extension Modules, Li
William Pickard added the comment:
Use, when distutils calls findall in the module, it results in the OSError
being thrown.
--
___
Python tracker
<https://bugs.python.org/issue32
William Pickard added the comment:
Looks like something wierd about my computer as the powershell module that
interacts with the API also has the issue with Windows reporting "File not
found" for a 2nd instance (maybe Community edition of VS)
--
resolution: -> no
William Pickard added the comment:
The powershell module that interacts with the API works if I don't supply
"-All", supplying said option produces the same issue that is plagues me when
_findvs.findall() is used.
--
___
Python
William Pickard added the comment:
Scratch the previous message about the possible cause, I found the true cause,
getresponse() is waiting for a specific header, one that
BaseHTTPRequestHandler.send_error sends and
BaseHTTPRequestHandler.send_response() doesn't, that header is "
Change by William Pickard :
--
keywords: +patch
pull_requests: +4969
stage: -> patch review
___
Python tracker
<https://bugs.python.org/issue25095>
___
___
Py
Change by William Pickard :
--
title: test_httpservers hangs on 3.5.0, win 7 -> test_httpservers hangs since
Python 3.5
type: crash -> performance
___
Python tracker
<https://bugs.python.org/i
William Pickard added the comment:
Martin, your suggestion will never work as if you look at the trace back posted
terry.reedy and my test print statements, both the client and server get stuck
waiting to read data their respective socket, hence the deadlock. Adding the
header "Conne
William Pickard added the comment:
It hangs for me on Windows 10 Professional running on a MSI gaming laptop for
debug and PGO builds (Python 3.6)
--
___
Python tracker
<https://bugs.python.org/issue25
William Pickard added the comment:
I have tried value 0 for "Content-Length" (along with "text/plain" for
"Content-Type"), it was when I said I tried both "Content-Length" and
"Content-Type", while I haven't tried directly setting &quo
William Pickard added the comment:
My computer was running BitDefender Total Security 2018 (At the time, currently
running the 2019 edition) and MalwareBytes 3 Premium.
BitDefender has both a built-in firewall and a web protection module while
MalwareBytes has a web protection module
Change by William Pickard :
--
pull_requests: +8966
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