The following script was used to adjust test data:
----------
#!/usr/bin/env python3
import json
import sys
import re
def json_dumps(data):
return json.dumps(data, ensure_ascii=False,
indent=2, separators=(',', ': '))
for filename in sys.argv[1:]:
with open(filename, 'r') as f:
data = json.loads(f.read())
if 'objects' not in data:
continue
trailer = None
to_sort = []
for k, v in data['objects'].items():
if k == 'trailer':
trailer = v
else:
m = re.match(r'^(\d+) \d+ R', k)
if m:
to_sort.append([int(m.group(1)), k, v])
newobjects = {x[1]: x[2] for x in sorted(to_sort)}
if trailer is not None:
newobjects['trailer'] = trailer
data['objects'] = newobjects
print(json_dumps(data))
----------
This commit just changes the order in which fields are written to the
json without changing their content. All the json files in the test
suite were modified with this script to ensure that we didn't get any
changes other than ordering.
----------
#!/usr/bin/env python3
import json
import sys
def json_dumps(data):
return json.dumps(data, ensure_ascii=False,
indent=2, separators=(',', ': '))
for filename in sys.argv[1:]:
with open(filename, 'r') as f:
data = json.loads(f.read())
newdata = {}
for i in ('version', 'parameters', 'pages', 'pagelabels',
'acroform', 'attachments', 'encrypt', 'outlines',
'objects', 'objectinfo'):
if i in data:
newdata[i] = data[i]
print(json_dumps(newdata))
----------
I had some ideas about some more convenience methods from discussions
with some developers, but I decided that the newly added ones cover
most of the use cases. The other ideas were too hard to explain
clearly and therefore too specialized to put into the public API,
where I would have to support them for a long time.
Where not possible, use "auto" to get the iterator type.
Editorial note: I have avoid this change for a long time because of
not wanting to make gratuitous changes to version history, which can
obscure when certain changes were made, but with having recently
touched every single file to apply automatic code formatting and with
making several broad changes to the API, I decided it was time to take
the plunge and get rid of the older (pre-C++11) verbose iterator
syntax. The new code is just easier to read and understand, and in
many cases, it will be more effecient as fewer temporary copies are
being made.
m-holger, if you're reading, you can see that I've finally come
around. :-)