- Update to version 2.0.1:

- Removed use of "nonlocal" that prevented using this version of 
    pyparsing with Python 2.6 and 2.7. This will make it easier to 
    install for packages that depend on pyparsing, under Python 
    versions 2.6 and later. Those using older versions of Python
    will have to manually install pyparsing 1.5.7.
  - Fixed implementation of <<= operator to return self; reported by
    Luc J. Bourhis, with patch fix by Mathias Mamsch - thanks, Luc
    and Mathias!
- Changes from version 2.0.0:
  - Rather than release another combined Python 2.x/3.x release
    I've decided to start a new major version that is only 
    compatible with Python 3.x (and consequently Python 2.7 as
    well due to backporting of key features). This version will
    be the main development path from now on, with little follow-on
    development on the 1.5.x path.
  - Operator '<<' is now deprecated, in favor of operator '<<=' for
    attaching parsing expressions to Forward() expressions. This is
    being done to address precedence of operations problems with '<<'.
    Operator '<<' will be removed in a future version of pyparsing.

OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/devel:languages:python/python-pyparsing?expand=0&rev=26
This commit is contained in:
Sascha Peilicke 2013-09-17 13:28:37 +00:00 committed by Git OBS Bridge
parent f8b99d39e8
commit e37a4cfdf7
4 changed files with 28 additions and 18 deletions

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-------------------------------------------------------------------
Tue Sep 17 13:15:51 UTC 2013 - speilicke@suse.com
- Update to version 2.0.1:
- Removed use of "nonlocal" that prevented using this version of
pyparsing with Python 2.6 and 2.7. This will make it easier to
install for packages that depend on pyparsing, under Python
versions 2.6 and later. Those using older versions of Python
will have to manually install pyparsing 1.5.7.
- Fixed implementation of <<= operator to return self; reported by
Luc J. Bourhis, with patch fix by Mathias Mamsch - thanks, Luc
and Mathias!
- Changes from version 2.0.0:
- Rather than release another combined Python 2.x/3.x release
I've decided to start a new major version that is only
compatible with Python 3.x (and consequently Python 2.7 as
well due to backporting of key features). This version will
be the main development path from now on, with little follow-on
development on the 1.5.x path.
- Operator '<<' is now deprecated, in favor of operator '<<=' for
attaching parsing expressions to Forward() expressions. This is
being done to address precedence of operations problems with '<<'.
Operator '<<' will be removed in a future version of pyparsing.
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Tue Sep 17 12:45:24 UTC 2013 - dmueller@suse.com
@ -12,64 +36,50 @@ Wed Mar 13 09:04:46 UTC 2013 - dmueller@suse.com
release of pyparsing will be version 2.0.0, using new Python
syntax that will not be compatible for Python version 2.5 or
older.
* An awesome new example is included in this release, submitted
by Luca DellOlio, for parsing ANTLR grammar definitions, nice
work Luca!
* Fixed implementation of ParseResults.__str__ to use Pythonic
''.join() instead of repeated string concatenation. This
purportedly has been a performance issue under PyPy.
* Fixed bug in ParseResults.__dir__ under Python 3, reported by
Thomas Kluyver, thank you Thomas!
* Added ParserElement.inlineLiteralsUsing static method, to
override pyparsing's default behavior of converting string
literals to Literal instances, to use other classes (such
as Suppress or CaselessLiteral).
* Added new operator '<<=', which will eventually replace '<<' for
storing the contents of a Forward(). '<<=' does not have the same
operator precedence problems that '<<' does.
* 'operatorPrecedence' is being renamed 'infixNotation' as a better
description of what this helper function creates. 'operatorPrecedence'
is deprecated, and will be dropped entirely in a future release.
* Added optional arguments lpar and rpar to operatorPrecedence, so that
expressions that use it can override the default suppression of the
grouping characters.
* Added support for using single argument builtin functions as parse
actions. Now you can write 'expr.setParseAction(len)' and get back
the length of the list of matched tokens. Supported builtins are:
sum, len, sorted, reversed, list, tuple, set, any, all, min, and max.
A script demonstrating this feature is included in the examples
directory.
* Fixed a bug in the definition of 'alphas', which was based on the
string.uppercase and string.lowercase "constants", which in fact
*aren't* constant, but vary with locale settings. This could make
parsers locale-sensitive in a subtle way. Thanks to Kef Schecter for
his diligence in following through on reporting and monitoring
this bugfix!
* Fixed a bug in the Py3 version of pyparsing, during exception
handling with packrat parsing enabled, reported by Catherine
Devlin - thanks Catherine!
* Fixed typo in ParseBaseException.__dir__, reported anonymously on
the SourceForge bug tracker, thank you Pyparsing User With No Name.
* Fixed bug in srange when using '\x###' hex character codes.
* Addeed optional 'intExpr' argument to countedArray, so that you
can define your own expression that will evaluate to an integer,
to be used as the count for the following elements. Allows you
to define a countedArray with the count given in hex, for example,
by defining intExpr as "Word(hexnums).setParseAction(int(t[0],16))".
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Mon Jan 14 11:56:55 UTC 2013 - saschpe@suse.de

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Name: python-pyparsing
Version: 1.5.7
Version: 2.0.1
Release: 0
Url: http://pyparsing.wikispaces.com/
Summary: Grammar Parser Library for Python