%define scl rh-python36 %{?scl:%scl_package %{name}} %{!?scl:%global pkg_name %{name}} %define name future %define version 0.17.1 %define unmangled_version 0.17.1 %define unmangled_version 0.17.1 %define release 1 Summary: Clean single-source support for Python 3 and 2 %{?scl:Requires: %{scl}-runtime} %{?scl:BuildRequires: %{scl}-runtime} Name: %{?scl_prefix}future Version: %{version} Release: %{release} Source0: future-%{unmangled_version}.tar.gz License: MIT Group: Development/Libraries BuildRoot: %{_tmppath}/future-%{version}-%{release}-buildroot Prefix: %{_prefix} BuildArch: noarch Vendor: Ed Schofield Packager: Martin Juhl Url: https://python-future.org %description future: Easy, safe support for Python 2/3 compatibility ======================================================= ``future`` is the missing compatibility layer between Python 2 and Python 3. It allows you to use a single, clean Python 3.x-compatible codebase to support both Python 2 and Python 3 with minimal overhead. It is designed to be used as follows:: from __future__ import (absolute_import, division, print_function, unicode_literals) from builtins import ( bytes, dict, int, list, object, range, str, ascii, chr, hex, input, next, oct, open, pow, round, super, filter, map, zip) followed by predominantly standard, idiomatic Python 3 code that then runs similarly on Python 2.6/2.7 and Python 3.3+. The imports have no effect on Python 3. On Python 2, they shadow the corresponding builtins, which normally have different semantics on Python 3 versus 2, to provide their Python 3 semantics. Standard library reorganization ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ``future`` supports the standard library reorganization (PEP 3108) through the following Py3 interfaces: >>> # Top-level packages with Py3 names provided on Py2: >>> import html.parser >>> import queue >>> import tkinter.dialog >>> import xmlrpc.client >>> # etc. >>> # Aliases provided for extensions to existing Py2 module names: >>> from future.standard_library import install_aliases >>> install_aliases() >>> from collections import Counter, OrderedDict # backported to Py2.6 >>> from collections import UserDict, UserList, UserString >>> import urllib.request >>> from itertools import filterfalse, zip_longest >>> from subprocess import getoutput, getstatusoutput Automatic conversion -------------------- An included script called `futurize `_ aids in converting code (from either Python 2 or Python 3) to code compatible with both platforms. It is similar to ``python-modernize`` but goes further in providing Python 3 compatibility through the use of the backported types and builtin functions in ``future``. Documentation ------------- See: http://python-future.org Credits ------- :Author: Ed Schofield :Sponsor: Python Charmers Pty Ltd, Australia, and Python Charmers Pte Ltd, Singapore. http://pythoncharmers.com :Others: See docs/credits.rst or http://python-future.org/credits.html Licensing --------- Copyright 2013-2018 Python Charmers Pty Ltd, Australia. The software is distributed under an MIT licence. See LICENSE.txt. %prep %{?scl:scl enable %{scl} - << \EOF} set -ex %setup -n future-%{unmangled_version} -n future-%{unmangled_version} %{?scl:EOF} %build %{?scl:scl enable %{scl} - << \EOF} set -ex python3 setup.py build %{?scl:EOF} %install %{?scl:scl enable %{scl} - << \EOF} set -ex python3 setup.py install --single-version-externally-managed -O1 --root=$RPM_BUILD_ROOT --record=INSTALLED_FILES %{?scl:EOF} %clean %{?scl:scl enable %{scl} - << \EOF} set -ex rm -rf $RPM_BUILD_ROOT %{?scl:EOF} %files -f INSTALLED_FILES %defattr(-,root,root)