PEP 237 – Unifying Long Integers and Integers
- Author:
- Moshe Zadka, Guido van Rossum
- Status:
- Final
- Type:
- Standards Track
- Created:
- 11-Mar-2001
- Python-Version:
- 2.2
- Post-History:
- 16-Mar-2001, 14-Aug-2001, 23-Aug-2001
Abstract
Python currently distinguishes between two kinds of integers (ints): regular or short ints, limited by the size of a C long (typically 32 or 64 bits), and long ints, which are limited only by available memory. When operations on short ints yield results that don’t fit in a C long, they raise an error. There are some other distinctions too. This PEP proposes to do away with most of the differences in semantics, unifying the two types from the perspective of the Python user.
Rationale
Many programs find a need to deal with larger numbers after the fact, and changing the algorithms later is bothersome. It can hinder performance in the normal case, when all arithmetic is performed using long ints whether or not they are needed.
Having the machine word size exposed to the language hinders portability. For examples Python source files and .pyc’s are not portable between 32-bit and 64-bit machines because of this.
There is also the general desire to hide unnecessary details from the Python user when they are irrelevant for most applications. An example is memory allocation, which is explicit in C but automatic in Python, giving us the convenience of unlimited sizes on strings, lists, etc. It makes sense to extend this convenience to numbers.
It will give new Python programmers (whether they are new to programming in general or not) one less thing to learn before they can start using the language.
Implementation
Initially, two alternative implementations were proposed (one by each author):
- The
PyInt
type’s slot for a C long will be turned into a:union { long i; struct { unsigned long length; digit digits[1]; } bignum; };
Only the
n-1
lower bits of thelong
have any meaning; the top bit is always set. This distinguishes theunion
. AllPyInt
functions will check this bit before deciding which types of operations to use. - The existing short and long int types remain, but operations return
a long int instead of raising
OverflowError
when a result cannot be represented as a short int. A new type,integer
, may be introduced that is an abstract base type of which both theint
andlong
implementation types are subclassed. This is useful so that programs can check integer-ness with a single test:if isinstance(i, integer): ...
After some consideration, the second implementation plan was selected, since it is far easier to implement, is backwards compatible at the C API level, and in addition can be implemented partially as a transitional measure.
Incompatibilities
The following operations have (usually subtly) different semantics for short and for long integers, and one or the other will have to be changed somehow. This is intended to be an exhaustive list. If you know of any other operation that differ in outcome depending on whether a short or a long int with the same value is passed, please write the second author.
- Currently, all arithmetic operators on short ints except
<<
raiseOverflowError
if the result cannot be represented as a short int. This will be changed to return a long int instead. The following operators can currently raiseOverflowError
:x+y
,x-y
,x*y
,x**y
,divmod(x, y)
,x/y
,x%y
, and-x
. (The last four can only overflow when the value-sys.maxint-1
is involved.) - Currently,
x<<n
can lose bits for short ints. This will be changed to return a long int containing all the shifted-out bits, if returning a short int would lose bits (where changing sign is considered a special case of losing bits). - Currently, hex and oct literals for short ints may specify negative values;
for example
0xffffffff == -1
on a 32-bit machine. This will be changed to equal0xffffffffL
(2**32-1
). - Currently, the
%u
,%x
,%X
and%o
string formatting operators and thehex()
andoct()
built-in functions behave differently for negative numbers: negative short ints are formatted as unsigned C long, while negative long ints are formatted with a minus sign. This will be changed to use the long int semantics in all cases (but without the trailing L that currently distinguishes the output ofhex()
andoct()
for long ints). Note that this means that%u
becomes an alias for%d
. It will eventually be removed. - Currently,
repr()
of a long int returns a string ending in L whilerepr()
of a short int doesn’t. The L will be dropped; but not before Python 3.0. - Currently, an operation with long operands will never return a short int. This may change, since it allows some optimization. (No changes have been made in this area yet, and none are planned.)
- The expression
type(x).__name__
depends on whether x is a short or a long int. Since implementation alternative 2 is chosen, this difference will remain. (In Python 3.0, we may be able to deploy a trick to hide the difference, because it is annoying to reveal the difference to user code, and more so as the difference between the two types is less visible.) - Long and short ints are handled different by the
marshal
module, and by thepickle
andcPickle
modules. This difference will remain (at least until Python 3.0). - Short ints with small values (typically between -1 and 99 inclusive) are
interned – whenever a result has such a value, an existing short int with
the same value is returned. This is not done for long ints with the same
values. This difference will remain. (Since there is no guarantee of this
interning, it is debatable whether this is a semantic difference – but code
may exist that uses
is
for comparisons of short ints and happens to work because of this interning. Such code may fail if used with long ints.)
Literals
A trailing L at the end of an integer literal will stop having any meaning, and will be eventually become illegal. The compiler will choose the appropriate type solely based on the value. (Until Python 3.0, it will force the literal to be a long; but literals without a trailing L may also be long, if they are not representable as short ints.)
Built-in Functions
The function int()
will return a short or a long int depending on the
argument value. In Python 3.0, the function long()
will call the function
int()
; before then, it will continue to force the result to be a long int,
but otherwise work the same way as int()
. The built-in name long
will
remain in the language to represent the long implementation type (unless it is
completely eradicated in Python 3.0), but using the int()
function is
still recommended, since it will automatically return a long when needed.
C API
The C API remains unchanged; C code will still need to be aware of the difference between short and long ints. (The Python 3.0 C API will probably be completely incompatible.)
The PyArg_Parse*()
APIs already accept long ints, as long as they are
within the range representable by C ints or longs, so that functions taking C
int or long argument won’t have to worry about dealing with Python longs.
Transition
There are three major phases to the transition:
- Short int operations that currently raise
OverflowError
return a long int value instead. This is the only change in this phase. Literals will still distinguish between short and long ints. The other semantic differences listed above (including the behavior of<<
) will remain. Because this phase only changes situations that currently raiseOverflowError
, it is assumed that this won’t break existing code. (Code that depends on this exception would have to be too convoluted to be concerned about it.) For those concerned about extreme backwards compatibility, a command line option (or a call to the warnings module) will allow a warning or an error to be issued at this point, but this is off by default. - The remaining semantic differences are addressed. In all cases the long
int semantics will prevail. Since this will introduce backwards
incompatibilities which will break some old code, this phase may require a
future statement and/or warnings, and a prolonged transition phase. The
trailing L will continue to be used for longs as input and by
repr()
.- Warnings are enabled about operations that will change their numeric
outcome in stage 2B, in particular
hex()
andoct()
,%u
,%x
,%X
and%o
,hex
andoct
literals in the (inclusive) range[sys.maxint+1, sys.maxint*2+1]
, and left shifts losing bits. - The new semantic for these operations are implemented. Operations that give different results than before will not issue a warning.
- Warnings are enabled about operations that will change their numeric
outcome in stage 2B, in particular
- The trailing L is dropped from
repr()
, and made illegal on input. (If possible, thelong
type completely disappears.) The trailing L is also dropped fromhex()
andoct()
.
Phase 1 will be implemented in Python 2.2.
Phase 2 will be implemented gradually, with 2A in Python 2.3 and 2B in Python 2.4.
Phase 3 will be implemented in Python 3.0 (at least two years after Python 2.4 is released).
OverflowWarning
Here are the rules that guide warnings generated in situations that currently
raise OverflowError
. This applies to transition phase 1. Historical
note: despite that phase 1 was completed in Python 2.2, and phase 2A in Python
2.3, nobody noticed that OverflowWarning was still generated in Python 2.3.
It was finally disabled in Python 2.4. The Python builtin
OverflowWarning
, and the corresponding C API PyExc_OverflowWarning
,
are no longer generated or used in Python 2.4, but will remain for the
(unlikely) case of user code until Python 2.5.
- A new warning category is introduced,
OverflowWarning
. This is a built-in name. - If an int result overflows, an
OverflowWarning
warning is issued, with a message argument indicating the operation, e.g. “integer addition”. This may or may not cause a warning message to be displayed onsys.stderr
, or may cause an exception to be raised, all under control of the-W
command line and the warnings module. - The
OverflowWarning
warning is ignored by default. - The
OverflowWarning
warning can be controlled like all warnings, via the-W
command line option or via thewarnings.filterwarnings()
call. For example:python -Wdefault::OverflowWarning
cause the
OverflowWarning
to be displayed the first time it occurs at a particular source line, and:python -Werror::OverflowWarning
cause the
OverflowWarning
to be turned into an exception whenever it happens. The following code enables the warning from inside the program:import warnings warnings.filterwarnings("default", "", OverflowWarning)
See the python
man
page for the-W
option and thewarnings
module documentation forfilterwarnings()
. - If the
OverflowWarning
warning is turned into an error,OverflowError
is substituted. This is needed for backwards compatibility. - Unless the warning is turned into an exceptions, the result of the operation
(e.g.,
x+y
) is recomputed after converting the arguments to long ints.
Example
If you pass a long int to a C function or built-in operation that takes an
integer, it will be treated the same as a short int as long as the value fits
(by virtue of how PyArg_ParseTuple()
is implemented). If the long value
doesn’t fit, it will still raise an OverflowError
. For example:
def fact(n):
if n <= 1:
return 1
return n*fact(n-1)
A = "ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQ"
n = input("Gimme an int: ")
print A[fact(n)%17]
For n >= 13
, this currently raises OverflowError
(unless the user
enters a trailing L as part of their input), even though the calculated
index would always be in range(17)
. With the new approach this code will
do the right thing: the index will be calculated as a long int, but its value
will be in range.
Resolved Issues
These issues, previously open, have been resolved.
hex()
andoct()
applied to longs will continue to produce a trailing L until Python 3000. The original text above wasn’t clear about this, but since it didn’t happen in Python 2.4 it was thought better to leave it alone. BDFL pronouncement here:https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2006-June/065918.html
- What to do about
sys.maxint
? Leave it in, since it is still relevant whenever the distinction between short and long ints is still relevant (e.g. when inspecting the type of a value). - Should we remove
%u
completely? Remove it. - Should we warn about
<<
not truncating integers? Yes. - Should the overflow warning be on a portable maximum size? No.
Implementation
The implementation work for the Python 2.x line is completed; phase 1 was released with Python 2.2, phase 2A with Python 2.3, and phase 2B will be released with Python 2.4 (and is already in CVS).
Copyright
This document has been placed in the public domain.
Source: https://github.com/python/peps/blob/main/pep-0237.txt
Last modified: 2017-11-11 19:28:55 GMT