[Python-Dev] [Python-checkins] cpython (3.2): Issue #14409: IDLE doesn't not execute commands from shell with default

Andrew Svetlov andrew.svetlov at gmail.com
Sat Mar 31 13:21:14 CEST 2012


Updated NEWS as Terry Reedy recommended.
Thank you, Terry.
On Sat, Mar 31, 2012 at 12:59 AM, Terry Reedy <tjreedy at udel.edu> wrote:
> On 3/30/2012 2:31 PM, Andrew Svetlov wrote:
>>>> Thank you for mentoring.
>>>> I will fix NEWS if you help me with better text.
>>> I believe a succint message would be
>> Issue 14409: IDLE now properly executes commands in the Shell window when it
> cannot read the normal config files on startup and has to use the built-in
> default key bindings. There was previously a bug in one of the defaults.
>>>> The bug fixed is that commit is:
>> IDLE has 3 configs: user, system default and hardcoded in python code.
>> Last one had bad binding for<Return>  key.
>> Usually this config is never used: user or system ones overrides former.
>> But if IDLE cannot open config files by some reason it switches to
>> hardcoded configs and user got broken IDLE.
>>>> Can anybody guess me short and descriptive message describing what fix
>> well?
>>>> On Fri, Mar 30, 2012 at 6:12 AM, Nick Coghlan<ncoghlan at gmail.com>  wrote:
>>>>>> On Fri, Mar 30, 2012 at 2:01 AM, andrew.svetlov
>>> <python-checkins at python.org>  wrote:
>>>>>>>> +- Issue #14409: IDLE doesn't not execute commands from shell,
>>>> +  error with default keybinding for Return. (Patch by Roger Serwy)
>>>>>>>>> The double negative here makes this impossible to understand. Could we
>>> please get an updated NEWS entry that explains what actually changed
>>> in IDLE to fix this?
>>>>>> Perhaps something like "IDLE now always sets the default keybind for
>>> Return correctly, ensuring commands can be executed in the IDLE shell
>>> window"? (assuming that's what happened).
>>>>>> This is important, folks: NEWS entries need to be comprehensible for
>>> people that *haven't* read the associated tracker issue. This means
>>> that issue titles (which generally describe a problem someone was
>>> having) are often inappropriate as NEWS items. NEWS items should be
>>> short descriptions that clearly describe *what changed*, perhaps with
>>> some additional information to explain a bit about why the change was
>>> made.
>>> --
> Terry Jan Reedy
>>> _______________________________________________
> Python-checkins mailing list
> Python-checkins at python.org
> http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-checkins

-- 
Thanks,
Andrew Svetlov


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