On Thu, Aug 2, 2018 at 1:22 AM, Paul Moore <p.f.mo...@gmail.com> wrote: > On Wed, 1 Aug 2018 at 16:10, Robin Becker <ro...@reportlab.com> wrote: >> >> On 01/08/2018 14:38, Chris Angelico wrote: >> > t's a warning designed to help people port code from Py2 to Py3. It's >> > not meant to catch every possible comparison. Unless you are actually >> > porting Py2 code and are worried that you'll be accidentally comparing >> > bytes and text, just*don't use the -b switch* and there will be no >> > problems. >> > >> > I don't understand what the issue is here. >> >> I don't either, I have never used the -b flag until the issue was raised on >> bitbucket. If someone is testing a program with >> reportlab and uses that flag then they get a lot of warnings from this >> dictionary assignment. Probably the code needs tightening >> so that we insist on using native strings everywhere; that's quite hard for >> py2/3 compatible code. > > They should probably use the warnings module to disable the warning in > library code that they don't control, in that case. > > If they've reported to you that your code produces warnings under -b, > your response can quite reasonably be "thanks for the information, > we've reviewed our bytes/string handling and can confirm that it's > safe, so there's no fixes needed in reportlab".
Yep, agreed. And I suspect that there may be a bit of non-thinking-C-mentality creeping in: "if I can turn on warnings, I should, and any warning is a problem". That simply isn't the case in Python. ChrisA -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list