##// END OF EJS Templates
manifest: delay import of `typing.ByteString` for py 3.14 support (issue6940)...
manifest: delay import of `typing.ByteString` for py 3.14 support (issue6940) Since Python 2.7 and 3.5, `typing.ByteString` was defined as an alias for `bytes | bytearray | memoryview`, and `bytes` was also accepted as a shorthand for this, so we have `bytes` sprinkled all over the codebase. But then PEP-688 reversed all of that by deprecating `typing.ByteString` and its successor `collections.abc.ByteString` in Python 3.12 (as well as the `bytes` shorthand)[1], and removing it completely in Python 3.14. That leaves us with a couple of problems, namely defining something useful that spans py3.8-py3.13 and keeps pytype happy, and finding all of the instances where `bytes` doesn't really mean `bytes`. The current successor to all of this is `collections.abc.Buffer` in Python 3.12 (or `typing_extensions.Buffer` in previous versions). However, the current CI does type checking using Python 3.11 (so the former is not avaiable), and pytype has issues with importing `typing_extensions.Buffer`[2]. The good news is we don't need to deal with this mess immediately, since the type annotation evaluation is delayed to the type checking phase, and we're making no effort at supporting it in all supported versions of Python. So by delaying the import of this particular symbol, we can still use it for type checking purposes, but can start assessing Python 3.14 problems without doing a lot of extra work. Putting this on stable will allow people interested in 3.14 to work on it 4-5 extra months earlier (and apparently there's some interest). [1] https://peps.python.org/pep-0688/#no-special-meaning-for-bytes [2] https://github.com/google/pytype/issues/1772

File last commit:

r47647:fc8a5c9e default
r53224:0851d94b stable
Show More
hg.bat
21 lines | 509 B | application/x-msdownload | BatchLexer
@echo off
rem Windows Driver script for Mercurial
setlocal
set HG=%~f0
set PYTHONLEGACYWINDOWSSTDIO=1
rem Use a full path to Python (relative to this script) if it exists,
rem as the standard Python install does not put python.exe on the PATH...
rem Otherwise, expect that python.exe can be found on the PATH.
rem %~dp0 is the directory of this script
if exist "%~dp0..\python.exe" (
"%~dp0..\python" "%~dp0hg" %*
) else (
python "%~dp0hg" %*
)
endlocal
exit /b %ERRORLEVEL%