##// END OF EJS Templates
typing: add `from __future__ import annotations` to most files...
typing: add `from __future__ import annotations` to most files Now that py36 is no longer supported, we can postpone annotation evaluation. This means that the quoting is usually optional (for things imported under the guard of `if typing.TYPE_CHECKING:` to avoid circular imports), and there's less overhead on startup[1]. There may be some missing here. I backed out 6000f5b25c9b (which removed the `from __future__ import ...` that was supporting py2), reverted the changes in `contrib/`, `doc/`, and `tests/`, and then ran: $ hg status -n --change . | \ xargs sed -i -e 's/from __future__ import .*$/from __future__ import annotations/' There were some minor tweaks needed when reviewing (mostly making the spacing around the import consistent, and `mercurial/testing/__init__.py` had a multiline import that wasn't fully rewritten. [1] https://docs.python.org/3/whatsnew/3.7.html#pep-563-postponed-evaluation-of-annotations

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debug.rs
24 lines | 822 B | application/rls-services+xml | RustLexer
// debug.rs
//
// Copyright 2020 Raphaël Gomès <rgomes@octobus.net>
//
// This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
// GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
//! Module to get debug information about Rust extensions.
use cpython::{PyDict, PyModule, PyResult, Python};
/// Create the module, with `__package__` given from parent
pub fn init_module(py: Python, package: &str) -> PyResult<PyModule> {
let dotted_name = &format!("{}.debug", package);
let m = PyModule::new(py, dotted_name)?;
m.add(py, "__package__", package)?;
m.add(py, "__doc__", "Rust debugging information")?;
let sys = PyModule::import(py, "sys")?;
let sys_modules: PyDict = sys.get(py, "modules")?.extract(py)?;
sys_modules.set_item(py, dotted_name, &m)?;
Ok(m)
}