Your IP : 18.221.217.100


Current Path : /opt/hc_python/lib/python3.8/site-packages/aenum/
Upload File :
Current File : //opt/hc_python/lib/python3.8/site-packages/aenum/CHANGES

3.1.13
======

- remove Python 2.6 code
- add Python 3.12 enhancements
- split source code into separate files
- Enum and Flag inherit from stdlib versions


3.1.12
======

support inheriting from empty NamedTuples


3.1.10
======

prevent test_v3.py from being run as main


3.1.9
=====

Move Py2/3 specific code to dedicated files


3.1.8
=====

recalculate bits used after all flags created (sometimes needed when a custom
`__new__` is in place.


3.1.7
=====

update flag creation to (possibly) add bitwise operator methods to newly
created flags

update extend_enum() to work with 3.11 flags


3.1.6
=====

Update `dir()` on mixed enums to include mixed data type methods and
attributes.

Rename `enum_property` to `property` to match stdlib.  Recommended usage is
`aenum.property` (prefix with module name).

Remove quadritic creation behavior.


BREAKING CHANGE BUG FIX that won't affect most people

Enums with a custom `__new__` that:

- use the enum machinery to generate the values; AND
- have keyword arguments set to a default (like `None`)

will fail to generate a missing value.  To fix: remove the default value and
instead specify it on the member creation line.

BREAKING CHANGE

In Python 3.11 the `str()` of mixed enums will now match its `format()` which
will be the normal `str()` of the data type -- so for an IntEnum you'll see
`5` instead of `Perm.R|X`.  This affects IntEnum, StrEnum, and IntFlag.


3.1.5
=====

fix support of `auto()` kwds


3.1.3
=====

rename `aenum.property` to `aenum.enum_property`

fix `enum_property` to work with `_init_` attributes


3.1.2
=====

fix `extend_enum()` for unhashable values


3.1.1
=====

fix `extend_enum()` for most cases


3.1.0
=====

AddValue is similar to the old AutoNumber: it will always activate, but
uses _generate_next_value_ to get the next value (so the user has some
control over the return data type instead of always getting an int).


BREAKING CHANGES

AutoValue is gone.  It was superflous and its removal simplified the code.
Simply put the fields needed in an `_init_` and `_generate_next_value_`
will be called to supply the missing values (this is probably already what
is happening).



3.0.0
=====

standard Enum usage is unchanged

BREAKING CHANGES

Enum
- the more esoteric method of creating Enums have been modified or removed
  - AutoNumber setting is gone, inherit from AutoNumberEnum instead
  - creating members without specifying anything is removed (if you don't
    know what this means, you weren't doing it)

Flag
- unique flags are canonical (i.e. flags with powers of two values such as
  1, 2, 4, 8, 16, etc.)
- non-unique flags are aliases (i.e. values such as 3 or 7)
- iteration of Flag and flag members only uses canonical flags


ENHANCEMENTS

Member creation has been redone to match Python 3.10's methods.  This also
allows all supported Pythons (2.7, 3.3+) to use the __set_name__ and
__init_subclass__ protocols (more robustly than in aenum 2.2.5)


CHANGES

enum_property() has been renamed to property() (old name still available, but
deprecated).

bin() replacement shows negative integers in twos-complement




2.2.5
=====

call __init_subclass__ after members have been added, and in Pythons < 3.6
call __set_name__ in Pythons < 3.6
do not convert/disallow private names
add iteration/len support to NamedConstant


2.2.4
=====

add support to Constant to retrieve members by value

    --> class K(Constant):
    ...     one = 1
    ...     two = 2

    --> K.one
    <K.one: 1>

    --> K(1)
    <K.one: 1>

add pickle/deepcopy support to Constant

add support for Constant to use other Constant values
  (resulting members /are not/ the same)

    --> class C(Constant)
    ...     one = K.one
    ...     three = 3

    --> C.one == K.one
    True

    --> C.one is K.one
    False

AutoNumber and auto() now work together

Enum members are now added to the class as enum_property, which supports
unshadowing of parent class attributes when called on an Enum member:

    --> class StrEnum(str, Enum):
    ...     lower = 'lower'
    ...     upper = 'upper'
    ...     mixed = 'mixed'
    
    --> StrEnum.lower
    <StrEnum.lower: 'lower'>

    --> StrEnum.lower.upper()
    'LOWER'

    --> StrEnum.upper
    <StrEnum.upper: 'upper'>

    --> StrEnum.upper.upper()
    'UPPER'


2.2.3
=====

use members' type's methods __str__, __repr__, __format__, and
__reduce_ex__ if directly assigned in Enum class body; i.e.:

    --> class Color(str, Enum):
    ...     red = 'red'
    ...     green = 'green'
    ...     blue = 'blue'
    ...     __str__ = str.__str__

    --> print(repr(Color.green))
    <Color.green: 'green'>

    --> print(Color.green)
    green


2.2.2
=====

replace _RouteClassAttributeToGetattr with enum_property (it is still
available as an alias)

support constant() and auto() being used together:

    --> class Fruit(Flag):
    ...    _order_ = 'apple banana lemon orange'
    ...    apple = auto()
    ...    banana = auto()
    ...    lemon = auto()
    ...    orange = auto()
    ...    CitrusTypes = constant(lemon | orange)

    --> list(Fruit)
    [Fruit.apple, Fruit.banana, Fruit.lemon, Fruit.orange]

    --> list(Fruit.CitrusTypes)
    [Fruit.orange, Fruit.lemon]

    --> Fruit.orange in Fruit.CitrusTypes
    True


2.2.1
=====

allow Enums to be called without a value

    class Color(Enum):
        black = 0
        red = 1
        green = 2
        blue = 3
        #
        @classmethod
        def _missing_value_(cls, value):
            if value is no_arg:
                return cls.black

    >>> Color()
    <Color.black: 0>

allow Enum name use while constructing Enum (Python 3.4+ only)

    --> class Color(Enum):
    ...     _order_ = 'BLACK WHITE'
    ...     BLACK = Color('black', '#000')
    ...     WHITE = Color('white', '#fff')
    ...     #
    ...     def __init__(self, label, hex):
    ...         self.label = label
    ...         self.hex = hex


2.2.0
=====

BREAKING CHANGE
---------------
In Python 3+ classes defined inside an Enum no longer become members by
default; in Python 2 they still become members, but see below.

For cross-compatibility and full control two decorators are provided:

- @member  --> forces item to become a member
- @nonmember  --> excludes item from becoming a member

So to have an Enum that behaves the same in Python 2 and 3, use the
decorators (and other compatibility shims):

    class Color(Enum):

        _order_ = 'red green blue'

        red = 1
        green = 2
        blue = 3

        @nonmember
        class Shades(Enum):

            _order_ = 'light medium dark'

            light = 1
            medium = 2
            dark = 3


2.1.4
=====

EnumMeta:
- change __member_new__ to __new_member__ (as the stdlib enum does)
- assign member name to enum() instances (an Enum helper for defining members)
- handle empty iterables when using functional API
- make auto() work with previous enum members
- keep searching mixins until base class is found

Enum:
- fix bug in Flag checks (ensure it is a Flag before checking the name)
- add multiple mixin support
- do not allow blank names (functional API)
- raise TypeError if _missing_* returns wrong type
- fix __format__ to honor custom __str__

extend_enum:
- support stdlib Enums
- use _generate_next_value_ if value not provided

general:
- standardize exception formatting
- use getfullargspec() in Python 3 (avoids deprecation warnings)


2.1.2
=====

when order is callable, save it for subclass use


2.1.1
=====

correctly raise TypeError for non-Enum containment checks
support combining names with | for Flag key access
support _order_ being a callable


2.1.0
=====

support Flags being combined with other data types:
- add _create_pseudo_member_values_ 
- add default __new__ and temporary _init_ 


2.0.10
======

ensure _ignore_ is set when _settings_ specified in body which includes
AutoValue

make Flag members iterable


2.0.9
=====

fix missing comma in __all__
fix extend_enum with custom __new__ methods
fix MultiValue with AutoNumber without _init_


2.0.8
=====

extend_enum now handles aliases and multivalues correctly


2.0.7
=====

support mixin types with extend_enum
init and AutoNumber can now work together
add test for new Enum using EnumMeta
add tests for variations of multivalue and init
prevent deletion of NamedConstant.constant


2.0.6
=====

constants cannot be deleted (they already couldn't be changed)
constants can be used to define other constants


2.0.5
=====

_init_ and MultiValue can now work together


2.0.4
=====

_init_ and AutoValue (and _generate_next_value_) can now work together to
supply missing values even when some of the required values per member are
absent


2.0.3
=====

add _missing_value_ and _missing_name_ methods, deprecate _missing_
make enum instances comparable


2.0.2
=====

both EnumMeta.__getattr__ and Enum.__new__ fall back to _missing_


2.0.1
=====

auto() now works with other data types
AutoNumber supports legacy Enums (fixed regression)


2.0.0
=====

Flag and IntFlag added.


1.4.7
=====

fix %-interpolation bug
defined SqlLiteEnum only if sqlite exists
support pyflakes


1.4.6
=====

version numbering error


1.4.5
=====

revert AutoNumberEnum to custom __new__ instead of AutoNumber
use _ignore_ to shield against AutoNumber magic
inherit start and init settings from base Enums


1.4.4
=====

enabled export as a decorator
enabled _order_ to replace __order__
enabled python2 support for settings, init, and start


1.4.3
=====

support _ignore_ for dynamically creating class bodies


1.4.2
=====

MultiValue, NoAlias, Unique, and init now work with Python 2


1.4.1
=====

Py3: added Enum creation flags: Auto, MultiValue, NoAlias, Unique

fixed extend_enum to honor Enum flags


1.4.0
=====

When possible aenum inherits from Python's own enum.

Breaking change: enum members now default to evaluating as True to maintain
compatibility with the stdlib.

Add your own __bool__ (__nonzero__ in Python 2) if need this behavior:

    def __bool__(self):
        return bool(self.value)
    __nonzero__ = __bool__


?>